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Materials for hats and manufacturing. Sinamay. Banana fibre for hats – similar properties to cotton Seems to be a main material for hats.
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Sinamay • Banana fibre for hats – similar properties to cotton • Seems to be a main material for hats. • If you want to make the most up-to-date hats, you’ll want to use sinamay, the contemporary hat making fabric. Unlike traditional hat fabrics like straw and felt, it comes in flat sheets by the yard (metre).
Sinamay • Choose a crown block and an up-turning brim block (one with a hole in the middle) and go for it!
Sinamay • Using pre-formed brim shapes will saves all the work of planning, cutting and finishing brims – and there are cost savings too. Its well worth learning how to use these lovely brims which come in a number of styles and sizes and can be dyed to whatever colour you choose. • Note that these pre-formed brims will not have a hole in the centre.
You can become addicted to using sinamay in this ‘freeform’ way, because the possibilities it offers are almost endless.
Buckram • Buckram is a stiff cloth, made of cotton, and still occasionally linen. • It can be shiny or dull.
Buckram • Millinery buckram is impregnated with a starch, which allows it to be softened in water, pulled over a hat block, and left to dry into a hard shape. White buckram is most commonly used in hat making, though black is available as well. • Millinery buckram comes in three weights: baby buckram (often used for children's and dolls' hats), single-ply buckram, and double buckram (also known as "theatrical crown").
Linen and silk fibres • Linen & Silk Fibre Hats Don’t be restricted by the idea that ladies hats are traditionally made from only sinamay, straw or felt. • These would need to have a fabric stiffener applied to them to make them usable.
Felt • The felt ‘cones’ and ‘capelines’ (the technical names for the preformed shapes used) are made from such beautiful, thick fur-felt that, by using steam and some careful manipulation, brim shapes, and even whole hats can be formed by hand. • And don’t throw away any left-over pieces of this lovely felt – they can be made into cocktail-style hats by a very similar method
French canvas • 100% cotton or linen mesh hats. • You not only get broad brims for cooling shade, but also mesh crowns to catch every hint of a breeze.
Other hat materials • Leather • Sheepskin • Cotton, polyester, synthetics, etc • Interweb is also sometimes used as a fusible web without paper backing to bond two layers of textiles together. Millenary wire is also used to form shapes in both steel and clear. • Edges of wire are generally covered with sinamay, bias binding, or ribbon.
Manufacturing • One off: straw and felt hat making, hand blocking • Batch: The blocking machine • Mass: Hydraulic press • Hat making technology is generally ‘low tech’. • Even in the most up to date hat factory, all hat making calls for skilled workers and it is a labour intensive craft with anything up to 12 different operations carried out by 4 different departments before the hat can be delivered to the customer.