Saturday, August 30, 2025

Next Level Millinery


 In May 2025, I bought two straw panama hats at two different thrift shops.

 

 

 

 


 The untrimmed light straw hat on the left came from Salvation Army thrift shop and cost $2. The brown hat on the right came from a Value Village, cost $7.33, and was trimmed with a narrow band of dull gold grosgrain, which I didn't care for. They did look okay as they were, but I though they both could benefit from being trimmed. 

 

 

 

 

 

As I wrote in this post, I had trimmed another panama hat, bought from Walmart, in a cream grosgrain a year before in the spring of 2024, but I was never really happy with it. It looked amateurishly done. I watched some instructional videos on how to put a grosgrain ribbon on a hat, and found out what I should have done differently. The bow was too big and floppy and on the wrong side (the convention seems to be that hats have their bows on the left side), I stitched the ribbon on wrong so that it was too loose and my stitches showed, and I didn't know that one is supposed to press the ribbon after putting it on the hat. I also learned that I should stitch the band together and slip it over the ribbon, then slide the ends and the bow through it and stitch things in place, rather than trying to stitch the band around everything last.  

 

 

 

 

I ripped the gold ribbon off the brown hat, bought a length of dark brown grosgrain ribbon for $2.55, and retrimmed the hat, implementing the new tips I'd learned from my research. Total cost of hat: $9.88. I was much happier with the finished result than I had been with the hat I did last spring. It looks reasonably professional. 

 

 

 

 


 For the $2 light straw hat, I bought a length of butterscotch-coloured grosgrain ribbon for $10.34 (this was a far less common colour of ribbon than the cream or dark brown and I had to go to a specialty shop), and put it on. Total cost of hat: $12.34. I was also very pleased with how this one turned out.

 

 

 

 


 After I'd finished trimming the two new hats, the first one looked so poorly done by contrast that I ripped the cream grosgrain off the hat I trimmed last year and redid it to the same standard as the other two. 

I try to learn at least one new thing from each project. With this project I not only learned how to put a grosgrain ribbon on a hat, but also that no matter how simple and straightforward a new project might seem, it's a good idea to research it. I'm bound to learn something from my research, and the results will be at least a bit better, and possibly so much better that they're on a completely different level, than if I just try to wing it and figure it out as I go.  

 

 

 

 

 

It feels incredibly self-indulgent to have three such similar hats, but now I always have a hat that goes just right with any summer outfit I happen to be wearing, they didn't cost so very much, and they will last me for years.

1 comment:

  1. I'm always so happy to see your posts! Great work, as always.

    ReplyDelete