How to Measure Your Head Size & Hat Size: Intro to Hat Blocks and Pattern Making

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • The first step to finding or making the perfect hat is understanding the hat size or head size or your head or that of your client! We will learn how to take the perfect head measurement and how to translate that into hat size. We will look at wooden hat blocks in various head sizes and how they can help you in the production of hats for yourself or others and we will talk about the next step, drafting a simple one piece pattern from that information and making a headband in the next lesson, lesson 2. Welcome to Hats101, lesson 1. Certified Milliner Tori Cape's series about learning how to make and wear hats. Capes has been in the business of hat design and creation for over 36 years with her brand Mad Cap Hats based in Ontario, Canada. If you love hats please subscribe to our channel to follow along on this journey. Who knows, maybe we will inspire you to start your own hat business!
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Комментарии • 34

  • @madcaphats
    @madcaphats  2 года назад +1

    Check out our original hat designs on our website www.madcaphats.com Leave any questions in the comment section below!

  • @Heatevjfv
    @Heatevjfv Год назад +2

    So much more helpful than a few other videos. So great . And the info comes from a hat maker ! Thank you 🙏

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад

      Thank you Susan for your lovely compliment!!! Picking the right hat is easier when you know your head size. In the summer I will do a video at a festival where I advise on choosing the right hat that will flatter different face shapes and heights etc. Most of the folks who say they don't like hats usually don't know how to pick the perfect shape that would be most flattering for them. So many times I see people try on hats backwards and laugh and it is my challenge to help them understand that a hat can be very useful and flattering at the same time when the right one for them is selected. Thanks for watching!!! Tori

  • @sharononeal6402
    @sharononeal6402 Год назад +2

    I'm delighted to see that hat-making is still a craft in North America! I love your designs. My great aunt was a milliner in the 30s and 40s in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. She made beautiful hats to sell and often gave hats to my mother. As children, my sisters and me loved dressing up in those hats! They were loaded with feathers, baubles, ribbons, bows, and even face netting. I wish I had them back, and I wish I knew much more about my great aunt and how she learned her craft! Thank you for sharing your knowledge with the world. Where did you go to school to learn this artistry?

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад

      Thank you Sharon. What a lovely comment and story! I went to school at George Brown College in Toronto through the Fashion Program. I was self taught before that. I was actually about 15 years into my hat business when I realized I wanted to learn more and be around like minded people. Took three years. I know there is a similar program in New York City, at the Fashion Institute. In those days of our parents, a well dressed person would not leave the house without a hat on their head. It always amazes me how well those shapes from the 30s and 40s, especially the fedora, have stood up over time! i will so a blocking video sometime in the summer so I hope you subscribed and will join me on this journey of hats! Nice to meet you on RUclips! Tori

    • @sharononeal6402
      @sharononeal6402 Год назад +1

      @@madcaphats So Tori I have a question for you. I just finished a jacket of forest green velvet that's lined with a rusty shade of red satin. It's for my granddaughter and it came out fabulously beautiful and she loves it. I'd like to make a hat that looks like your winter cloche. I bought your pattern and instructions and I've watched the construction video. Do you think if I line 2 pieces of the velvet with heavyweight woven sew-in interfacing between them it will work for the top of the hat? I'd like to make the brim out of the red satiny fabric. I thought I'd use some lightweight iron-on interfacing on the back of the red. Then make the brim as you do out of 2 pieces of fleece with sew-in interfacing. The red satin would be on the inside of the brim so when it was turned up on the finished hat the red satin would face to the outside. I'm mostly wondering the best way to stabilize the green velvet. It's beautiful in soft folds, so I don't want it to be too stiff. Your thoughts?

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад

      @@sharononeal6402 i was thinking about the cloche in fabric again yesterday and realize the reason I didn't like it the one time i made it from a woolen fabric was because the swooping brim seemed flat. I think that a quilting interfacing, armo fleece for example, would give the brim some life. Also, a really lovely antique brooch about 2.5 inches in diameter or length ... in the same tones as the buttons on the jacket or with some the velvet tones and reds, would be stunning. A really large button sewn on to hold up the swoop would be great too. I think you should do the brim in the Velvet on the side that shows and red satin on the under side that mostly sits next to the hat. Lining in the the satin and maybe try to work a small piece of the satin into the brooch but use the velvet for most of the hat as that is so similar to the the brush of the fleece. Also cut a bit larger than you would for fleece, another 1/2" in the length of each piece. Cut the larger top. Do two pieces for the top and but them wrong sides together, velvet outside satin inside, to have a lined top as well. So little pieces of velvet aren't in the hair. I hope this works, if too big at least you can trim down. Please let me know how it works out!!

    • @sharononeal6402
      @sharononeal6402 Год назад +1

      @@madcaphats Thank you Tori I will keep you posted! Now to hunt for the mysterious armo fleece quilt interfacing!

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад

      It is a dense filling. Adds some loft. What you might think of as the filling in a placemat.

  • @renar11d11
    @renar11d11 Год назад +1

    Thank you for letting me know how to measure. We'll see how my first order goes.

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад

      Keep us posted Rena! Your hats will keep getting better and better i promise!! Practise makes perfect!

  • @karenhively488
    @karenhively488 Год назад +2

    Thank you love your videos

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад

      Thank you Karen!! This is one of our first ones!! 😊

    • @ironrose888
      @ironrose888 Год назад

      I love your videos too. I’m tired of getting sore throats and ear aches. I’m going to make fleece hats and scarves to wear instead of blankets. 😊

  • @bratgirlrules8094
    @bratgirlrules8094 Год назад +1

    Thank you❤

  • @wmyoung1000
    @wmyoung1000 Год назад +1

    hot air, hehe i love it :)

  • @camopen1193
    @camopen1193 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video! I'm starting a project to make a nice Santa Clause hat and have been looking for some tips :-)

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад +1

      I also have a video about a faux fur pillbox and one for pom pom hat ... if you combine the two, you could put a furry brim around the bottom of your pom pom hat. Good luck and Santa hats are the best!!! Tori

    • @camopen1193
      @camopen1193 Год назад +1

      @@madcaphats thanks. Wish I had a way to reply with photos to show my progress 😁

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад +1

      Me too! Would love to see your photos! Maybe that will be a RUclips update someday

    • @camopen1193
      @camopen1193 Год назад +1

      @@madcaphats I sent you a picture on Instagram 😁

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад

      Will check my Instagram!

  • @WV591
    @WV591 3 месяца назад +1

    And where is the next video

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  3 месяца назад

      Here it is!! ruclips.net/video/Yby9oH3E604/видео.html Thanks so much for watching! Tori

  • @rashidka6215
    @rashidka6215 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hai mam

  • @ironrose888
    @ironrose888 Год назад +1

    You are correct. The “regular” hats for women don’t fit me. They are too tight and give me a headache or they keep sliding off my head and blow away. 😢

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Год назад

      Anne Marie ... I hope you get a chance to measure your head. Be sure to measure from the top of one ear, over your head to the top of your other ear. A size large would have a measurement of about 13 inches or about 33 cm from ear to ear ... many hats do not come down far enough to reach that sweet spot on your head where a hat sits nicely when your head is a bigger than the industry standard. Tori

  • @rashidka6215
    @rashidka6215 11 месяцев назад +1

    My head size is 23 its normal ??? Plzzz rply mam

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  11 месяцев назад

      For a woman average is 22.5 and for a man it's 23.5 so you are a bit above average for a woman or a bit below for a man. Hope that helps!

  • @kerryhorwitz4093
    @kerryhorwitz4093 Месяц назад

    Divide by pi? Seriously? Who on earth knows how to do that?

    • @madcaphats
      @madcaphats  Месяц назад

      @@kerryhorwitz4093 that is what a hat size is. Makes sense and if I was making you a hat I would know how big it would need to be if you told me that you had a hat that fits you and inside that hat it said 7 1/4 for example. I would know that your head was 22.5 inches around your head, above your ears and across your forehead. The finished band would need to be at least that long around your head to fit comfortably . Just an interesting fact about the business of hats and hat making. Pi is 3.14 for sake of hat making and hat size. Now you know!