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Making a Basic Brim Pattern is fundamental to making any brimmed
hat. I've worked out this approach as an easy alternative to what you will find
in real books on Millinery work. I'm sure my Millinery teacher would cringe
if she ever read it, *but* it works and it's easier.
Note: These directions do not teach a modern Milliery approach
to hat-making. I've completely eliminated the use of standard hat sizes and
head-size ovals, because I'm assuming that most of the people reading this are
*not* trying to set up a hat-making shop. The method I've worked out below works,
but doesn not produce standardized patterns sizes unless you are one of the
lucky few who actually possesses a standard size head.
To Pattern the Brim |
To make the Brim pattern, you will need:
- a Flexible Ruler
- a Regular Ruler
- Paper (notebook/printer and larger)
- a Head (the one the hat is meant for)
- Scissors
- a French Curve (optional, but nice)
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Decide where on the head you want the brim to fall. The
modern habit is to wear the hat down around the ears. Elizabethans tended
to wear their hats up above the temple. LADIES: At this stage, you must
decide how you will be wearing your hair when you wear the hat, and put
it that way. Whether you wear your hair up or down can change the size
and shape of hat you need.
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Wrap the Flexible Ruler snugly around the head, where
the hat is meant to set.
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Looking down from above, you should not see gaps between
the head and the ruler. This is harder to tell if there's hair on the
head you're using. If the hair is up, you may see gaps at either side
of the bulk of the hair. Don't smooth those out, or you will have a brim
with a divot taken out -- very awkward to sew!
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Carefully lift the Flexible Ruler off the head, and move
it to a sheet of paper. If you keep a firm hold on the ruler where it
overlaps itslelf, and handle it gently, it should not change shape while
you move it. This is important, because it allows you to make a truly
custom hat brim pattern. (While everyone's head is oval shaped, every
one of those ovals is just a little different.)
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Trace around the inside edge of the ruler, and
you'll get a rough oval like this.
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Carefully cut out the oval out of the piece of paper.
The goal is actually to preserve the paper with a single, oval shaped
hole cut out of it so that we can double check our oval against the head
before we get any farther.
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Place the paper *gently* over the head, to make sure it
rests at the desired point.
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From above, check to see that there are no gaps between
the paper template and the head.
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Now, draw a line just a hair outside the oval. ("A
hair" is roughly between a 16th and 32nd of an inch. This seems trivial,
but trust me -- it's a circumference thing.) This adds a small amount
of ease. The construction method we're going to use in the brims doesn't
require a large amount of ease, but some is good. Too-tight hats give
headaches.
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Now we're going to true out our oval just a little. (Sure,
we want to fit your unique head exactly, but we don't want to do it so
exactly that you have to wear the hat exactly the same way every time
you put it on because it it's turned by so much as a degree, it doesn't
fit right.) First, fold the oval in half. Match up the sides of the oval
as best as you can, even if that means the sides of the paper don't match.
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Now fold the oval again, into quarters, matching as best
as you can. The edges of the oval won't all line up. That's ok. That's
the next step.
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Using a French Curve (or any other handy object with a
regular curve to it), round out any weird flat or pokey bits of the oval.
(Yes, that's a technical term.)
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Here is the trued line from my curve. As you can see,
these adjustments are pretty tiny.
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With the ease added and the curve trued out, I should
have enough room to slip the tip of my pinky finger between the template
paper and the head. That's enough to keep your hat from feeling like it's
eating your head.
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Congratulations! You've just finished the most crucial
part of this whole process. I strongly recommend labelling the template
paper, so you don't pick it up in a few months and wonder why you have
a piece of paper with an oval cut out. I've also drawn an ink line over
my quarter folds, so that my front, back, and sides are clearly marked
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Start the brim pattern on a larger sheet of paper (I'm
using an 11x17" sheet of Bristol Board. Cardboard or posterboard
would also do.) I've drawn a set of crosshairs on the paper, and used
them to center up my oval template.
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Using a pen, transfer the oval to the larger paper.
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You'll need to decide how wide you want the brim of your
hat at this point. A brim width between 1" and 2" seems to be
most typical in the Elizabethan era (referencing Janet Arnold, period
portraits) I'm using a 2" brim. Mark out the width of the bring around
the center oval, using your ruler and pen
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The finished markings are the outside edge of the brim.
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Cut the brim pattern out of the paper, following the inner
and outer ovals as precisely as possible. This is your basic brim, without
seam allowances. This will be used to make the brim pattern with seam
allowances, and to cut the stiffening pieces for stiffened brims. You
should label this piece and keep it handy.
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On a second sheet of large paper, trace a copy of your
basic brim. Using your ruler mark out a half inch seam allowance (adjust
that if you strongly prefer 5/8ths or something else) on each side of
the brim. THis is important, as brims are cut as two pieces (upper and
lower brim) and must be sewn together at both the inside and outside edges.
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Again, you'll want to cut out your pattern piece. This
is the basic brim, with seam allowances. It should be labelled as such.
You've just made a full brim pattern.
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