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The saga of the dog hat
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 1:34 pm
by Fedora
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 1:45 pm
by Doctor_Jones
Oh my God.
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 1:49 pm
by Fedora
This is not the first time this has happened!! Dogs love beaver, so much that they want to eat them. I would be afraid to leave my hat around any dog. And, now, I never do!!! Fedora
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 1:55 pm
by Fedora
Oh my God.
You should have reserved that for this one.
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 2:20 pm
by Texas Raider
My dogs are completely indifferent to my hats. (other than the fact that when I put it on, they know it might be time to "go outside!" and start getting excited
) They don't treat it like it's some kind of snack or food or anything, including the AB. Of course, I have really good dogs
.
TR
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 2:27 pm
by GCR
Texas Raider wrote:My dogs are completely indifferent to my hats. (other than the fact that when I put it on, they know it might be time to "go outside!" and start getting excited
) They don't treat it like it's some kind of snack or food or anything, including the AB. Of course, I have really good dogs
.
TR
I hear ya. My dog's the same way. Very well behaved...heck, I have a hard enough time getting him to eat FOOD and play with TOYS...he'd never so much as sniff one of my hats the wrong way. But he's sort of indifferent to things, I guess. My last dog might have munched on a fedora or two, if the opportunity arose, but my current dog? No chance.
Then again, if I had a SQUIRREL-felt hat, that might be a VERY different story!
Anyway, Fedora, it looks like the crown on that AB has kept its shape very well after all the exposure its had to the elements. Was the hat bashed before or after this experiment began?
-GCR
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 2:42 pm
by IndyParise
Texas Raider wrote:My dogs are completely indifferent to my hats. (other than the fact that when I put it on, they know it might be time to "go outside!" and start getting excited
) They don't treat it like it's some kind of snack or food or anything, including the AB. Of course, I have really good dogs
.
TR
My dog does the same. First time I wore my Akubra by him, he didn't know it was me at first though. He started running away and barking like he does to strangers. Now he just knows it means I'm going outside or going to school.
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 2:58 pm
by Fedora
It must be something with Mississippi dogs.
This is the second time this has happened to me. It may be like that old saw about "will this dog bite?" The first dog was a pit bulldog, this one here was part collie and part golden retriever. Perhaps the breed of the dog enters into the equation? I dunno. I just don't trust ANY dog anymore.
Not when it comes to hats, anyways. I guess I would trust a toothless dog though. All he could do was gum the hat to death? Fedora
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 3:07 pm
by Doctor_Jones
Fedora wrote:Oh my God.
You should have reserved that for this one.
OH MY GOODNESS!!
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 5:02 pm
by Texas Raider
Fedora wrote:It must be something with Mississippi dogs.
Michaelson, you gonna let 'im talk about you that way?!
TR
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 6:10 pm
by Indiana G
nice TR!
if my dog was there, there wouldn't be a hat to take pictures of....he will eat anything, chew anything.......as long as it doesn't have my scent on it. he will mangle my wife and kids stuff but has left my stuff pretty much alone. thats him over there <---------------. guess he knows that daddy is the only one in the house that knows how to use the whip.......
hey fedora, i think you should offer that bash to your customers as the 'EXTREME SOC' bash.
cheers!
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 7:15 pm
by Michaelson
Texas Raider wrote:Fedora wrote:It must be something with Mississippi dogs.
Michaelson, you gonna let 'im talk about you that way?!
TR
Sure, I'm in Tennessee. May there IS something with Mississippi dogs...
Regards! Michaelson
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 9:06 pm
by Russ
A long time ago our family dog would suddenly attack people whenever they put on gloves. This was because the only time we put on gloves in his presence was so we could play rough with him and let him bite our hands as hard as he wanted. What fun memories...
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 11:31 pm
by Strider
That hat shows very little taper! That's wonderful, and it gives me a lot of confidence to not worry about my AB if the fog is heavy that day or it rains. Did this hat dry in the same position it was in when it got wet, or did you turn the crown upside down to let it dry?
Posted: Sat Nov 25, 2006 1:00 am
by Fedora
That hat shows very little taper! That's wonderful, and it gives me a lot of confidence to not worry about my AB if the fog is heavy that day or it rains. Did this hat dry in the same position it was in when it got wet, or did you turn the crown upside down to let it dry?
I just left it on the brim while it was outside. I need to sit it on top of an old hat block to keep it off the brim. It was just hanging on a fence post. The ideal would be to have someone just sit outside 24 hours a day, but I doubt anyone would volunteer for such a task.
The next best thing would be just using a hat block as the head. Fedora
Posted: Sat Nov 25, 2006 2:46 am
by Texas Raider
Michaelson wrote:Texas Raider wrote:Fedora wrote:It must be something with Mississippi dogs.
Michaelson, you gonna let 'im talk about you that way?!
TR
Sure, I'm in Tennessee. May there IS something with Mississippi dogs...
O.k., so he got his states mixed up, you
still gonna let him talk about you that way?!
TR
Posted: Sat Nov 25, 2006 5:07 am
by Strider
Fedora wrote:I just left it on the brim while it was outside. I need to sit it on top of an old hat block to keep it off the brim. It was just hanging on a fence post. The ideal would be to have someone just sit outside 24 hours a day, but I doubt anyone would volunteer for such a task.
The next best thing would be just using a hat block as the head. Fedora
That just bolsters my confidence even more!
Posted: Sat Nov 25, 2006 8:06 pm
by Michaelson
Texas Raider wrote:
O.k., so he got his states mixed up, you
still gonna let him talk about you that way?!
TR
Sure. He's family.
Regard! Michaelson
Posted: Sun Nov 26, 2006 2:14 am
by Paul_Stenhouse
Steve,
Those don't look like 'screen-accurate' teeth marks. I think they need to be bigger by about 0.005 of an inch.
Do you agree?
Paul
Posted: Sun Nov 26, 2006 9:50 am
by Fedora
Those don't look like 'screen-accurate' teeth marks. I think they need to be bigger by about 0.005 of an inch.
Do you agree
Let's make them bullet holes. Fired by a Thompson submachine gun. No wait, wrong caliber for Nazi's. Michaelson will know the correct caliber.
Fedora
Posted: Sun Nov 26, 2006 11:45 am
by darthjones
Wow, thats great to see. Beautiful crown shape still.
Is the new felt that Marc had specially made for his new hats or prior felt that he, like you said, "treated?"
Posted: Sun Nov 26, 2006 11:47 am
by IndyParise
Fedora wrote: Michaelson will know the correct caliber.
Fedora
Well I could tell you that one, 9mm. Doesn't take a genius like Michaelson
Posted: Sun Nov 26, 2006 12:03 pm
by VP
MP40 technical details:
Weight: 4 kg
Caliber: 9x19 9mm Parabellum
About 450 shots per minute
32 bullets per magazine
Still feeding those dogs?
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 12:24 am
by jeboat
Fedora,
Are you still feeding those Mississippi dogs expensive beaver? You know you can buy really good dog food for less than $1.00 a can at the grocery...
jeboat
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 12:52 am
by Texas Raider
Sure. He's family.
Regard! Michaelson[/
quote]
Yeah, I guess you're right
!! Move along, move along....
TR
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 3:23 am
by Marc
Great idea my friend!!!
the "Marc Kitter Treatment" that an old German hatter was kind enough to share with him.
Hehehe!!! I like that... the "Marc Kitter Treatment"
"Watch you tongue pal, or I'll give you a Marc Kitter Treatment!"
Not to brag, but actually I was
discussing this technique with two old time hatters here in Europe (one of them being in Germany) and both of them agreed to, that it SHOULD work, but it is a
new technique that I came up with (after reading various scientific written pages on hair structures etc. etc. - what a head ache) in opposite to something that was re-discovered (and I guess that's why you won't hear other hatters talking about it
).
Good to see how well this technique performs! And don't forget: it's an Adventurebilt exclusive folks
Regards,
Marc
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 3:27 am
by darthjones
Sounds great, Marc. Is this hat though an example of the fur bodies with which you are working now and for the forseeable future?
I hope to order one of yours in a few months and am wondering if there will be any difference between gorgeous now and incredible later...
Thanks!
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 4:34 am
by Marc
No Sir, this is one of the rawbodies Steve got from his felter, but treated with that socalled "Marc Kitter Treatment"
(too funny really, I hope nobody ever does that to me though), which is supposed to "kill" the felt, to make it more taper resistent (similar to a vintage felt) - obviously with very good results.
I have a few plans for the next months (years?), but that will hardly have any influence on the felt (unless of course I can talk my felter into a
limited edition of seal fur felt - but that stuff is
INCREDIBLY expensive and as if that wouldn't be enough, it takes an entire seal for a single rawbody). In regards of pure beaver felt, I really feel that I've come to an end by now and a liner can easily be replaced later on
Regards,
Marc
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 5:02 am
by darthjones
Right on, Marc. Thanks. I was just soooooo happy to see the taper-resistant behavior here. I am one of those who spent way too much money on HJ's in years past and am excited about everything that Steve and yourself are doing.
Still saving up for one of yours but currently enjoying one of Steve's.
The AB is by itself ressurecting the height of hat making it seems.
Again, thanks for the response.
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 5:37 am
by Marc
I am one of those who spent way too much money on HJ's in years past and am excited about everything that Steve and yourself are doing.
Sounds familiar
Steve and I have spent literally thousands of Dollars (and Euros) on Indy Fedoras over the past years, before we figured that we could do at least as good for way less. So we're saving you bucks and us a bad Karma for not ripping you off
Regards,
Marc
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 5:14 pm
by Texas Raider
Hey Marc, spare the seals, my friend. Speaking of bad karma,,I think making a hat out of seals that have been clubbed to death isn't the best idea one could have..
Don't mean to sound like your local leaf-licker here, but that's a little extreme, IMO, just for an Indiana Jones fedora.
TR
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 6:43 pm
by Indiana G
i think TR is right. i just couldn't bring myself to do it.....baby seal is just a little past my comfort level. i mean i have no problem wearing calfskin alden boots or getting a kangaroo bullwhip.....but i've seen how they club these little guys and it just doesn't look right....
i'd "shoot a man in reno, just to watch him die" but i can't justify sporting seal fur apparel.
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 2:24 am
by Marc
I extra paid 50% extra to get a seal skin from Greenland in opposite to Alaska or Canada. The seals from Greenland are hunted traditionally by the Inuit for their living and not for the felt alone and each family may only shoot (NOT club) so and so many seals per year - with EXTREMELY harsh restrictions. Due to electricity and hightec clothes, the oil for lamps and the skin for coats are not longer as demanded as they were a hundred years ago, but the meat still is. I give you my word, that the seal which skin I bough would have been shot (again: not clubbed) no matter if someone would have bought the skin or not. - I do have a conscience too after all.
And it's certainly not a baby seal, for two little reasons: too little meat and it's forbidden to shot them.
Regards and thanks for your honest opinion - which will always be valued from me,
Marc
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 9:23 am
by Fedora
I can't believe some ASSUME the seals were, (1 baby seals, and (2 that they were clubbed to death. You know the old saw about ASSUMING anythng. Give Marc some credit here.
These seals are a food source for the native people. What is left over is the skin. You can throw them away, or sell them. But even the feltmaker had qualms about using the skins, but his curiosity got the better of him as he too wonders what sort of felt the fur would make. And, he told Marc he would only do this once.
Personally I see nothing wrong with it. No more than harvesting deer, eating them, and then using the hides to make buckskin. Now, if the adult seals were being killed just for their skins to make hats, that would put them in the same category as beaver being killed just for their skins. I know of few folks who eat beaver so............get the whole story before you start pointing fingers. Fedora
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 12:05 pm
by Indiana G
i stand corrected and i apologize marc/fedora. its just that the majority of the population will envision the whole clubbing ritual when you mention that something is made from seal fur/pelt.
this stems from ignorance and i thank you for educating me on how these seals are harvested. that being said, its harder to educate others who choose to cling to those images from hunting baby seals....i.e. TR's "leaf licker" populas (hee hee..thats funny). some of them just won't listen as their beliefs stem from emotion and not logic (those of you out there that are married will understand what i'm talking about).
with this new info on the table, i would sport something of that nature, but i would definitely keep it on the down low so that the animal-rights people don't jump to conclusions like the way i did.
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 12:24 pm
by McFly
Yeah, and if you cross the seal your house will fall apart!
That sounds like it would be a very interesting experiment, that seal felt. Would you be able to get the same color out of it? Would it be made exact same way? I think seals have pretty slick fur, don't they? But MAN would that stuff be water resistant!
Anyway - Steve: that AB looks like its holding up great! Can you refresh my memory though on what exactly the Marc Kitter (MK? Whoa!) Treatment is? I can't seem to remember.
Looks great though - very encouraging.
In Christ,
Shane
Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 2:51 am
by Marc
would definitely keep it on the down low so that the animal-rights people don't jump to conclusions like the way i did.
Well, I didn't plan to have "Handcrafted from pure seal fur" on the sweatband
I was rather considering something like:
The One
Handcrafted
at The Adventurebilt Hat Co.
The one, as there'll probably only be one hat made ever. PERHAPS(!!!) I might be able to offer a highly limited edition of 3-10 hats or so, but that is far from guaranteed and I reckon that most people couldn't even afford the skin itself, let alone the processing of the fur, the specially made sweatband etc. etc. etc. It's just beyond good and bad and was rather though of as an experiment to see if I could create the finest hat that has ever been made of animal fur felt.
Would you be able to get the same color out of it? Would it be made exact same way? I think seals have pretty slick fur, don't they? But MAN would that stuff be water resistant
Probably all of it
However I'm not sure if I'd want to have it died at all, as the fur is supposed to have a silky silver color as it is naturally (should arrive today or tomorrow).
Can you refresh my memory though on what exactly the Marc Kitter (MK? Whoa!) Treatment is? I can't seem to remember.
The MK Treatment deals with the collar on Indy Jackets and has nothing to do with this
The "Marc Kitter Treatment" is a technique I developed after talking to a couple of old time hatters and people who've been in the hat industry for decades and after talking countless hours with Steve about how we could "kill" the felt of modern rawbodies, to make them behave like vintage rawbodies (more taper resistent). It's a technique that is only used from Steve and me and as you can see, the results speak for themselves.
Regards,
Marc
Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 4:14 am
by Marc
The skin of an outgrown, un-clubbed seal just arrived here at the office. They left the skin that was formerly over the head on, and there are neither blood stains nor clubbing holes nor anything alike. It has a seal of aprovement stamped on the underside, that it is indeed from Greenland as well.
The fur is soft and silky - but being from an outgrown animal, it is not entirely silver colored, so I might have to have it died nonetheless. We'll see how it felts.
Regards,
Marc
Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 4:24 am
by Strider
Marc wrote:
The "Marc Kitter Treatment" is a technique I developed after talking to a couple of old time hatters and people who've been in the hat industry for decades and after talking countless hours with Steve about how we could "kill" the felt of modern rawbodies, to make them behave like vintage rawbodies (more taper resistent). It's a technique that is only used from Steve and me and as you can see, the results speak for themselves.
Is this practice done on all AB and AB Dlx hats?
Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 4:46 am
by Marc
Yes, ever since it was developed (ca. mid October).
Regards,
Marc
Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 4:47 am
by 3thoubucks
Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 11:35 am
by Fedora
The fur is soft and silky - but being from an outgrown animal, it is not entirely silver colored, so I might have to have it died nonetheless. We'll see how it felts.
Marc, is there a thick coat of underfur under the top fur? Like on other felt producing animals? Fedora
Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 2:04 pm
by VP
Marc wrote:The skin of an outgrown, un-clubbed seal just arrived here at the office.
Hmm.... I wonder what your co-workers thought in the cubicles around you.
Got any pics?
Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 4:06 am
by Marc
Marc, is there a thick coat of underfur under the top fur? Like on other felt producing animals? Fedora
Well that's what puzzled me... There IS no underfur!!! - Or rather, the entire skin is ONLY underfur, without any guard hairs
I'm EXTREMELY curious about what the rawbody will be like!
Hmm.... I wonder what your co-workers thought in the cubicles around you.
Well, I DID get some very stupid comments like "murderer", "child eater" etc. etc. and had to
educate a couple of collegues (those with the lamb hide skin jackets and bags, you know
) on where I got the skin from, why it was shot to start with etc. etc. etc. :evil: After I had explained it a couple of times, people overcame their "disgust" and were rather fascinated about the density and softness of the fur.
Regards,
Marc
Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 10:00 am
by Indiana Blooze
Marc wrote:
Well, I DID get some very stupid comments like "murderer", "child eater" etc. etc. and had to educate a couple of collegues (those with the lamb hide skin jackets and bags, you know )
It's like that all over, Marc. IMHO it seems that those that most adamently stand up for the rights of those that can't, be they animal or man, are often the most hypocritical. A man I work with will not shop at a large home improvement store, or a really large 'buy anything under the sun here' store because they use 'slave labor' and are anti-American worker. Then he gets in his little foriegn made sports car and drives off
Keep up the good work Marc. I can hardly wait to see what you can do with seal skin fur.
Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 10:45 am
by Michaelson
Don't you worry, Blooze. I tailgate folks like that, driving their itty bitty cars, in my chunk of 1950 MOPAR Detroit iron every chance I get.
Not really, but it's neat to know that if I DID drive like that, they'd just be a speed bump to my monster car.
Regards! Michaelson
Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 4:08 pm
by Antone
Marc wrote:I give you my word, that the seal which skin I bough would have been shot (again: not clubbed) no matter if someone would have bought the skin or not. - I do have a conscience too after all.
And it's certainly not a baby seal, for two little reasons: too little meat and it's forbidden to shot them.
Does this mean I can't ask about the new "pre-bashed" ABs, or whether there literally is an "AB club?"
Sorry, I'm all for humane treatment of animals, but I just couldn't resist...
Antone
Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 5:00 pm
by WConly
Wow it just hit me -- I can see the trailer as if I was in a theatre -- The Man with the Hat is back and this time, it's not going to go down easy for him! Yes, the Man with the Hat -- staring Steve Delk as the intripid hatmaker with an eye for adventure. Stunts like you have never seen. Action beyond the human imagination. Yes! The Man with the Hat is back and larger than life! Steve Delk is 'Fedora -- the Man with the Hat' as the trilogy continues with his greatest adventure of all -- 'Raiders of the Lost Canine'! Coming soon to a theatre near you....not yet rated.
W>
Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 5:36 pm
by Michaelson
Be very careful suggesting that, W. Steve's been watching my collection of 1930's/40's 'serial adventures', and is currently watching my boxed set of Crime Film Noir movies.....you might give him ideas to try some of the stuff he's been watching lately.
Regards! Michaelson
Posted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 7:11 pm
by WConly
By the by....the origial working title for this project was....'Fedora and the Streets of Bow Wow'
!!!!! W>