This is where my hat rests at work every day. The morning sun on it looked so cool, I had to take a few pics. The first one is with a flash, the rest without. I've had this hat for about ten months now and it has plenty of character.
You're right, Renderking. I do feel pretty darn good with this hat on. I resisted Optimo for quite awhile. Then I saw Zohar's Indy Brown , then Sergei's. and that was it. The only thing I've done to it is cut the brim with my modified Swales HJ template as a guide and the shaping, of course.
I had to spray quite a bit of stiffener on the brim and use my flange and iron to get it the way I wanted, but this hat holds up well. I have had it for ten months and have no complaints.
Last edited by Dakota Ellison on Sun Jul 11, 2004 2:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I had to spray quite a bit of stiffener on the brim and use my flange and iron to get it the way I wanted, but this hat holds up well.
I have always loved the thinness and floppiness of the felt, but the stock brims just never looked right to me. I don't know if it was the way they do the dimensional cuts, or what. I do agree that to maintain the Indy look in the brim department, the stiffener really helps. I like my brims floppy, but, they can be too floppy too. IMO. Fedora
Fedora--
I think it is the dimentional cut... There is no drama in the hat when the machine makes the cut... I like my Optimo dimentional cut hats, though they are just too smooth, not like the Raiders hat.
Dakota Ellison wrote:That's right. It's the irregularities that give it character and drama that's missing in a new hat.
I noticed from the pictures of mine after I bashed it that it wasn't quite square and the brim was off center a little bit. Also when I wear it I seem to wear it slightly cocked. It seems like those small imperfections really give it the character and uniqueness.
That's right. It's the irregularities that give it character and drama that's missing in a new hat.
Yeah, we can thank Mr. Swales for that. He just took the scissors, or whatever he used and just cut. It is part and parcel of the Indy fedoras. On my personal hats I don't even bother sanding the transition points anymore. Just like Swales. Fedora