NamedAfterTheDog wrote:Hello, this is my first post!
Wondering if anyone has seen or purchased one of these fairly inexpensive Indy-style fedoras from an online store called the movie shop?
http://www.themovieshop.com/Adventurer- ... Movie-Hat/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
From the pictures, it looks pretty good. Any thoughts?
Thanks
![TOH :TOH:](./images/smilies/Indy-Hat-Tip.gif)
The answer to the first question is no, I have neither seen nor purchased one of those.
That said, you asked for thoughts -
My first thought is you can seldom trust or rely on photographs of items that seem to be "inexpensive" to accurately portray what you will receive if you buy. Many online sellers steal images from other websites that portray much more costly items and post them on their site, then deliver something different.
In this case the Terms and Conditions on the website say:
5 Disclaimer of warranties
The services and all information, products and other content included in or accessible from this web site and the linked sites, are provided on an
"as is" and "as available" basis and are subject to change at any time without notice to you. To the fullest extent permitted by law, The Movie Shop
disclaims and excludes all representations and warranties (express, implied and statutory, including but without limitation the warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement of proprietary rights) as to the services and all information, products and content included in and accessible from this web site or the linked sites.
and
7 Variation of content
The Movie Shop shall have the right in its
absolute discretion at any time and without notice to amend, remove or vary any of the content supplied in connection with the Service or which appears on any page of the The Movie Shop Web site.
In plain English that means you cannot rely on the photographs on their site, and they can change whatever they want, whenever they want and however they want and you can't complain. They could ship you a pink and purple polka dotted straw boater and your only recourse would be to return the item (at your expense) and hope they refunded your money.
A subthought is in their FAQ section they answer the question whether you can get other pictures by saying "All item images have been put online, we never hold back on extra images." Translated - they don't actually have the items on a shelf - they are fulfilling orders from elsewhere.
My second thought is a combination of "you get what you pay for," "there's no such thing as a free lunch" and "if it seems too good to be true - it probably isn't true."
You are being asked to pay $49.00 for a wool felt Indy hat. That price is in the retail range for a wool felt "licensed" Indy fedora from Dorfman Pacific. Assuming you don't simply receive one of those, or something equally tragic, you're going to receive a wool felt hat. Wool shrinks.
If it get's rained on - it shrinks. If you sweat in it - it shrinks. If you expose it to humidity - it shrinks. If it just sits around and does nothing - it shrinks. And it can't be reblocked or restored, and even if it could, the cost of a reblock is way more than $49.00.
My third thought, based on the second one, is you'll probably be excited when you order and bitterly disappointed when you receive the hat. In all likelihood it won't look or feel anything like you expect, and at that point you'll think about sending it back. At which point you'll discover that you have 14 days to do so - returns are at your expense - you can't return it if the package was opened. (Which is how you figured out you didn't like it.) and refunds are at their discretion, "if the returned product meets their standards." You will also discovery that you are not sending the return to a street address, and in fact the only PO box they provide is for use by UK residents.
My fourth and final thought is "buy once - cry once." Unless you only want the thing to wear once for Halloween, or to hang up as a display piece and hope that no-one who actually knows anything about hats in general or Indy fedoras in particular ever sees it, is you can save up 2 1/2 times the cost of this hat and buy a Federation IV, or 3 1/2 to 4 times and order a custom rabbit fedora from Northwest Hats or Garrison. In the latter case you'll have a custom made high quality hat, for a reasonable price, that won't shrink if a drop of rain hits it, and can be reblocked and rebuilt several times.
It may seem like a lot of money, but if you want a hat to wear, you'll thank yourself in the end for spending a bit more up front and not going through the anguish of trying to return a disappointment.