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Showing posts with label breaking in. Show all posts
Showing posts with label breaking in. Show all posts

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Breaking in a new 5950 Hat Part III


We could basically start a blog just on this topic.  This topic is one of our most popular and we ask people who find this page just based on these posts to stick around a little bit to read the rest of our blog.  Also, please visit our linked sponsors to feed us.  

We've written about breaking in New Era 5950 hats twice before.  First, we suggested heat and sweat to break in the lid.  We then suggested a technique involving a blow dryer.  This post will suggest our boldest strategy yet - putting the hat in an oven like a batch of cookies.  A word of caution - this is our most dangerous strategy for breaking in your hat, we are not responsible for your hurting yourself.  Call the fire department or your mother to supervise if need be.  

Alright, a brief recap.  The new 5950 - with the black underbill - is made of shrink resistant polyester.  The key with the old version of the 5950 was to shrink the wool on the outside of the hat, lowering the dome to make you look less like a goofball or a 75 year old manager.  The key with the new hats is to shrink the plastic mesh on the inside of the hat without ruining it (or burning your house down).  

Preheat your oven to 200 degrees with a cookie sheet placed inside.  Once the oven hits 200, place the cap in the oven for five minutes.  The metal piece on the top of the cap will become very hot if you put the cap in the oven for much longer, or at a much higher temperature than this.  Once you've had the lid in the oven for 5 minutes, take it out and slowly place it on your head - making sure you don't hurt yourself - and hold the top of the front of the dome down to the shape of your head.  Wait until it cools.  Repeat as needed.  

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Saturday, December 20, 2008

Breaking in a New 5950 Hat Part II

This summer, we came up with what has become our most popular post about breaking in a new 5950 cap.  Specifically, we've gotten a number of e-mails about shrinking the top of the cap or the "crown" of the hat.  

We've recently invented a new technique for shrinking the crown of these caps - so we thought a new post was  in order to explain our technique.  Once again, this is our most popular cluster of posts - so we invite you to visit our sponsors so that we can keep this page running.  

Step 1 of this new technique is to find a girlfriend and temporarily steal her blowdryer.  The WellDressedSportsGirlfriend was happy to oblige in this case.  Thanks, lady.  


As we mentioned in our previous post on this topic - the 5950 contains a plastic mesh frame beneath the caps logo to keep the crown firm.  The goal of this technique is to heat up the plastic on the inside the cap and shape it to your head.  Don't go overboard here - avoid heating up the cap too much and don't burn your head.

Reader Robb sent us the following tip for this stage: 

I wanted to pass on another suggestion (courtesy of my wife). I took her bottle of Downey Wrinkle Releaser and sprayed the whole outside of the bowl of the hat, with it on my head. I soaked it pretty well. I worked it in by smoothing it out hard with my palms. After it dried, I repeated that; but this time I blow dried it dry. I'm not sure if there was one portion of this procedure that was the kicker (I believe it was the wrinkle releaser/blowdrier) but the whole process has yielded a pretty good result.

Step 2 - Heat up the blowdryer and turn the cap over.  Start heating up the inside of the cap behind the logo.  


Step 3 - Once you've gotten the blowdryer warm and the inside of the cap is a bit loosened up, start pressing down on the crown of the cap, encouraging the plastic mesh inside to bend just a bit. You'll start to feel the heat on the other side of the cap.  Once you start to feel it getting hot shut off the blowdryer and give the cap a second to cool down.  Then put the cap on your head and hold your hands on top of the crown of the cap, shaping it to your liking.   

And there you have it!  Do this a couple of times and the plastic inside of your cap will bend to your liking.  It doesn't require any of the cap surgery that can result in breaking the hat and gives you an excuse to ask that girl you have a crush on for a favor.  Yup, we're just here to help.

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Thursday, July 17, 2008

Breaking in a New 5950 Hat

*This is our most popular post.  We welcome the visitors interested in getting their New Era caps to fit perfectly!  For more tips on what to wear as a sports fan, click here.

We've recently added a second part to this post here. Once you're done with this post we will direct you to that page for more suggestions.  

In 2007, New Era Cap announced that it was modifying its official on the field 5950 baseball hat.  Spike Lee even directed a commercial where superstar players were waiting in line to get one.  The new caps marked several changes.  Most prominent perhaps, the new caps featured a black, glare reducing underbill, something the company had experimented with as far back as the late 1990s with their Spring Training hats.  Older hats featured a gray underbill.  

Aside from a few small visual changes (the MLB logo in the back is now much more prominent) the caps also had a few changes that would impact how sports fans would break in their new hat.  The new caps are shrink resistant, which, while sounding like a good thing at first, also means that the hats are harder to shrink down to the form of your head.  The goal is to look more like this.

Breaking in the New Era 5950 has been a topic of discussion for baseball fans for some time. Guys like me had worked it down to a science and the changes in the caps forced me to rethink my approach.  

If it sounds like I'm taking this seriously its because I am.   Breaking in a hat properly can be the difference between looking like a fan that knows what they are doing and looking like a total dork.  

Back in the day (that is, before 2007), official caps were made mostly of wool.  The key to breaking in a wool cap was warm water.  Some people swore by wearing them in the shower, others boiled water and poured it onto the dome of the cap before letting it cool and placing it on their head.  Others preferred to just sweat in the cap, letting it form naturally to their head. The key was to avoid getting water on the bill of the cap or anywhere near the logo, making the colors bleed.

If the bill of the hat is, in fact, grey underneath you can shrink the dome of the cap by bringing water to a boil - letting it cool down a bit - then slowly pouring the water around the area of the hat you'd like to have shrink, avoiding the logo on the front.  Then wait a minute or two for the hat to cool and put it on your head, holding your hands over the dome.  The hat will shrink to your head, but you'll smell like a wet sheep.  

Experts also went so far as to perform cap surgery on the old caps.  By cutting out the mesh at the front of the cap, the hat would lay closer to your dome, thus avoiding the Lou Pinella look.  But this approach came with a danger, if you pierced the material of the cap (which is an easy thing to do) it resulted in complete disaster.  Ok, maybe not complete disaster, but it was annoying to have holes in your new cap.  Once the mesh was taken out, you could yank out the plastic needles that held the shape of the cap thus encouraging it to rest closer to your head. The end result is that the cap had the cool 'official' look but it laid down on your head more like the Twins Enterprises Franchise hats.  

Since 2007, the caps are polyester, instead of wool, and are thus harder to shrink or form to your head.  Polyester won't shrink with the warm water treatment like cotton or wool.  The upshot of this minor frustration is the fact that the new caps are much more breathable and they still can be worked into the shape of your head.  

So you now have several options.  You can either choose to look like Dontrelle Willis, cut out the mesh of the cap (again, I don't recommend this), or sweat in the cap naturally and slightly curve the bill of the cap.  This doesn't shrink the polyester, but forms the plastic inside the mesh of the cap on the opposite side of the logo.  Obviously, a lot of people recently have gone with the flat bill look, but I think doing this makes me look like one of the Mario Brothers.  It might work for LaBron James - but odds are you're not as cool as LaBron.  

The best way to break in the new caps are heat and human sweat.  Take the hat to the beach, wear it while jogging, or wear it to the game.  Choosing a good pair of sunglasses to match the hat can help you look like less of a geek while working on breaking in the cap naturally.  When you start to sweat and the cap gets warm, press down on the dome to shape it to your head. This approach takes time, but it gives you the most natural looking broken in feel.  

Sweating in a cap will naturally loosen it enough to let it sit on your dome properly.  Hence why pro baseball players look better in these caps than most bleacher bums.  The new caps are more stain resistant than the old caps, but you can wash off the salty sweat stains with warm water if they start to appear.

Final take: If you're a hardcore baseball fan, there is no better way to show your loyalty to a particular team than the New Era 5950.  Pick one up and sweat in it to break it in.  Think about picking up a Perfect Curve from Lids to shape the bill of the cap to your liking.   At first, I was unsure about the changes to the 5950, but now I've decided the extra work breaking in the cap is worth the cooler feel on top of my head on a hot summer day.  

Alternatively, you can look for a 5950 "low crown" edition.  Admittedly, I find that these are getting harder and harder to find as New Era only makes them for a few select teams.

If you're more of a casual fan, go with the already broken in "crushed" hats discussed in depth here.  

For more tips on how to break in a 5950, check out part two of this post here

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