Good stuff Richard.
Good deal. Theres nothing worse than a fitted cap that is not the right size. I find that sizing of flat caps can be kind of a crapshoot, even among higher end caps. Ive got a few Boston Scally caps and the sizing of those is, "interesting", even if you follow their sizing guide.Thanks for the tips guys. I tried the method on the video posted above by cleanshaved. I used steam from a kettle of boiling water to heavily steam the cap and used the 'two fist' method as shown in the video to stretch it a little. I repeated this several times, have worn the cap for a few hours at home, and it seems to have actually worked! It is a lot more comfortable to wear so for a small adjustment this certainly is effective
Haven't been this clean shaved since before B&B was founded.
Yeah, took long enough, didn't it?Glad to see that the actual purpose of this wetshaving-discussion forum has finally gotten around to you!
Good looking cap (and chap). Had you not said it was linen, I'd have thought it was suede.
I got 3 of them several years ago. Different colors. They sent one (kind of a denim blue) in medium, no way it would fit me. Instead of sending it back, I offered it to a young lady friend (a true hat lady, she looks great in any hat, top hat, bowler, you name it). It fit her perfectly.Good looking cap (and chap). Had you not said it was linen, I'd have thought it was suede.