Tina Mae Signature Buckaroo Hatters Hat PLAIN 10X
SKU:
$280.00
$280.00
Unavailable
per item
This is the Tina Mae Signature Buckaroo Hatters Hat. PLAIN no hat band and no trim. Choose YOUR Color with No Trim at all (picture is with Ribbon Brim trim add 35.00 to cost) You can Add your Own hat band or none at all.....These hats come in 10X, 50X, or 100X.. It's Up to YOU.. MUST Leave NOTE for SIZE and COLOR (IF Other than BLACK.) with Phone number.
**DISCOUNT COUPON CODE: DISCOUNT20
(**SAVE 20.00 ON SHIPPING!** DON'T FORGET TO ADD CODE!)
In NOTES: state SIZE, COLOR, and Phone number
Buckaroo Hatters purchase’s three types of hat bodies most if not all custom hatters use the same hat bodies. Buckaroo Hatters makes a 100X ( 100% beaver), 50X ( 50% beaver and 50% wild hare) and a 10X ( 100% wild hare) Ultimately the quality of a hat is determined by the user. A hat which fits you well, meets your individual requirements, and is appealing to you, is all you need.Beaver fur is the standard for measuring a hat’s quality, the higher the percentage of beaver in a hat the better the hat quality. Beaver fur, felts tighter, which results in a dense, light weight, thin hat which holds its shape in the rain longer than a lesser quality hat. The more densely felted the hat is the better it resist rain penetrating into the felt. Even a 100% beaver fur hat will eventually loose its shape if left out in a pouring rain long enough.
Wild hare fur can also be felted fairly tight and is more commonly available than beaver fur. Using wild hare fur for a hat body makes the hat more affordable and is soft to the touch. Wild hare fur does not felt as tightly (dense) as beaver fur. To construct an affordable hat body with good weather resistance properties felters experimented with combining beaver and rabbit fur to produce various blends of beaver-wild hare fur hat body. The blend combines the softness of wild hare but the stiffness of beaver. Eventually, hats were given an “X” rating to insinuate the quality of the hat. The difficulty in using the “X” quality to determine a hat’s quality is, there is no industry standard for an “X” value. The “X” can be what ever the manufacturer or the custom hatter choose to assign to the hat’s “X” value. The “X” rating was invented by the hat factory to assist customers in determining hat qualities and to increase sales. Companies would rate their poor hats without an “X” and up to as many “Xs” the merchant felt appropriate for the better quality hats or would best assist sales. It is believed in the beginning each “X” represented 10% beaver fur. A 10-X hat once represented 100% beaver fur was used to construct the hat body. However today some hat shops and hatters have changed the scale again by listing their hats as 200-X, 500-X, 1,000-X and up to 2500-X. The “X” rating only has value when it is known what the value of “X” represents for the amount of beaver fur used. Each hatter is free to label their hats with what ever “X” value they choose.
**DISCOUNT COUPON CODE: DISCOUNT20
(**SAVE 20.00 ON SHIPPING!** DON'T FORGET TO ADD CODE!)
In NOTES: state SIZE, COLOR, and Phone number
Buckaroo Hatters purchase’s three types of hat bodies most if not all custom hatters use the same hat bodies. Buckaroo Hatters makes a 100X ( 100% beaver), 50X ( 50% beaver and 50% wild hare) and a 10X ( 100% wild hare) Ultimately the quality of a hat is determined by the user. A hat which fits you well, meets your individual requirements, and is appealing to you, is all you need.Beaver fur is the standard for measuring a hat’s quality, the higher the percentage of beaver in a hat the better the hat quality. Beaver fur, felts tighter, which results in a dense, light weight, thin hat which holds its shape in the rain longer than a lesser quality hat. The more densely felted the hat is the better it resist rain penetrating into the felt. Even a 100% beaver fur hat will eventually loose its shape if left out in a pouring rain long enough.
Wild hare fur can also be felted fairly tight and is more commonly available than beaver fur. Using wild hare fur for a hat body makes the hat more affordable and is soft to the touch. Wild hare fur does not felt as tightly (dense) as beaver fur. To construct an affordable hat body with good weather resistance properties felters experimented with combining beaver and rabbit fur to produce various blends of beaver-wild hare fur hat body. The blend combines the softness of wild hare but the stiffness of beaver. Eventually, hats were given an “X” rating to insinuate the quality of the hat. The difficulty in using the “X” quality to determine a hat’s quality is, there is no industry standard for an “X” value. The “X” can be what ever the manufacturer or the custom hatter choose to assign to the hat’s “X” value. The “X” rating was invented by the hat factory to assist customers in determining hat qualities and to increase sales. Companies would rate their poor hats without an “X” and up to as many “Xs” the merchant felt appropriate for the better quality hats or would best assist sales. It is believed in the beginning each “X” represented 10% beaver fur. A 10-X hat once represented 100% beaver fur was used to construct the hat body. However today some hat shops and hatters have changed the scale again by listing their hats as 200-X, 500-X, 1,000-X and up to 2500-X. The “X” rating only has value when it is known what the value of “X” represents for the amount of beaver fur used. Each hatter is free to label their hats with what ever “X” value they choose.