Size 58 cm, brim width 5.0 cm There is a rise
Hand-dyed wheat braid
Original Bowler
< Feature 1>
The wheat blades are hand-dyed with two types of raw leaves and fermented indigo, and are connected and sewn.
It's a very time-consuming process, but it's a hat like no other.
< Feature 2>
Wheat is a natural material, so you can wear it very coolly.
< Feature 3>
Although it is a bowler, it is a unique brim with an original shape.
<A word from the craftsman about this work>
The material is two wheat blades.
1st
Picking the fresh leaves of indigo grown on abandoned farmland in Odawara,
Dyed wheat blades immediately.
Second
The so-called "indigo dyeing" is dyed using fermented indigo.
Indigo dyeing of fresh leaves is seasonal only in summer when it can be harvested.
It's a gentle color.
Fermented indigo dyeing is also expected. It's a good color because it's sometimes called Japanese Blue.
Using a special sewing machine called a blade sewing machine,
A string-like material called a wheat blade is sewn around from the top part.
According to the wooden pattern, the shape is made by the angle of the hand and the amount of force.
When I first saw it, I thought it looked like pottery.
There are almost no manufacturers that make blade sewing machines anymore.
All the hat makers managed to get it from their retired seniors.
I continue to use it while fixing a sewing machine that is decades old.
My buddy is also an old grandpa sewing machine.
This hat that I made with this partner this time uses a method called "connecting stitching".
It's something I invented myself, and I haven't seen it anywhere else so far.
Of course, there may be people in the wide world who have done it before me.
Hand-dyed wheat is deliberately cut into small pieces and sewn while alternating with plain blades
I made a pattern that looks like moonlight on the surface of the water.
It takes a lot of time, but it turns out to be a hat with good taste.