RickP
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,847
An older coffee co-hort asked me today if I could fix his hat and an old belt. Hes an old late 80s rancher here and his gear shows it lol.. The belt buckle ( a nice old Montana Silversmiths western buckle) was almost folded in thirds after a horse stomped on him about 20 yrs ago. He said he could still fasten and unfasten so he never bothered getting it fixed. After he saw a couple belts Ive made he figured I could freshen it up. I used my meager knowledge of silverwork to get the buckle flat again without cracking anything. Western belt end was missing and hes evidently lost about 70 lbs over the years... no telling how long hes been running around with a bit over a foot of belt sticking out beyond the buckle lol. Just happened to have a silver belt end thats a close match, so weve now got it cut to length and a new end installed. Leather all saddle soaped and cleaned, a coat of neatsfoot oil slathered on, and now its hanging with a bit of weight so we can straighten a few waist curves out. Got the silver all polished out and it looks a lot more like a belt buckle instead of a scrunched up tin can now.
His hat is a nice old Resistol 7x beaver from the early 70s. Hat and sweatband are in decent shape but the threads on the sweatband are coming loose and IT IS DIRTY . Should be a simple clean, sweatband resew, and a bit of steaming/ shaping. Hat came from the E.M. "Bub" Richardson Saddle shop in Madisonville Tx... One of the oldest saddle shop/ western wear stors in this part of Texas. Shop was first opened in the 1920s... closed in mid 70s when Bub died. If an active cow hand/ ranchers' hat is still in decent shape after all these years of wear, it says a lot for older felt. Always fun to handle something with some local history of hard, honest use. With all the years of accumilated sweatstains, Im thinking this one will get a good gas bath on the felt and a woolite bath on the liner while I have it apart. This is what a working central texas ranchers hat looks like
My game plan is to get the works all done and hand the hat and belt over with a "Pay me what you think its worth"
When he met Mr Bear they got along great and we got invited out to his ranch so bear can swim in one of his cleaner ponds. That alone is worth it to me lol. ( think I also just got invited to hunt over there). In my book it never hurts to be friends with someone who owns a bit over 2000 acres
His hat is a nice old Resistol 7x beaver from the early 70s. Hat and sweatband are in decent shape but the threads on the sweatband are coming loose and IT IS DIRTY . Should be a simple clean, sweatband resew, and a bit of steaming/ shaping. Hat came from the E.M. "Bub" Richardson Saddle shop in Madisonville Tx... One of the oldest saddle shop/ western wear stors in this part of Texas. Shop was first opened in the 1920s... closed in mid 70s when Bub died. If an active cow hand/ ranchers' hat is still in decent shape after all these years of wear, it says a lot for older felt. Always fun to handle something with some local history of hard, honest use. With all the years of accumilated sweatstains, Im thinking this one will get a good gas bath on the felt and a woolite bath on the liner while I have it apart. This is what a working central texas ranchers hat looks like
My game plan is to get the works all done and hand the hat and belt over with a "Pay me what you think its worth"
When he met Mr Bear they got along great and we got invited out to his ranch so bear can swim in one of his cleaner ponds. That alone is worth it to me lol. ( think I also just got invited to hunt over there). In my book it never hurts to be friends with someone who owns a bit over 2000 acres








