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Project Information

This rounding jack has been SOLD,

for your own Rounding Jack, email me for more information: [email protected]

Other hat tools available at this Etsy Store link: click here to go to Etsy.com

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Video:
What does this thing do? Watch this video by California Custom Hat Maker Tom Gomez from Premier Panama Hats using one of my Rounding Jacks on a felt body Hat. If you'd like to purchase a Custom Hat from Tom, here is a link to Tom's ebay Store


More Hatmaking Tool Videos from Tom Gomez:
  1. Foot Tollikers: click here to see
  2. Kettle Curling Tool: click here to see one
  3. Puller Downer: click here to see one:
  4. Pusher Downer (Runner Downer): click to see one
  5. Rounding Jack: click here to see one

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Tool Description:

This item is a Hat Making Tool that I designed and built. This is the second Rounding Jack in my "Collector Edition" Model line which features Ebonized Walnut, a Brass Blade Guard, and a hand painted laser engraved art scene.

This blade holder is my own design, made of thick brass, machined and assembled all in my own shop.

Specifications:
- Ebonized Walnut Wood
- Brass Blade Guard
- Clockwise Cutting Direction
- Brass Adjustable Crown Shoe
- Brass Under-Plate and Hardware
- Cutting Capacity: 1.25" - 8.0"
- Abalone Shell Inlay
- Hand Painted Gold Metallic, Laser Engraved Art with "Artisan Hat Tools by Mark DeCou Studio" Logo, Cowboy Boots and Western Hat, with scrollwork lines.

thanks for looking,
Mark DeCou
email: [email protected]

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Project Story:

Rounding Jacks are used to cut the brim felt to size on fedora, western hats, cowboy hats, and several other styles. The brass adjustable curve on the front is placed against the crown, and then the cutter is moved in a rotation around the hat, keep the pressure against the crown. Setting the blade to the proper size is done by adjusting the cutter to the desired cut size, and then tightening the brass knurled knobs.

Display Stand: The display stand is designed to sit on the hatmaker's work bench and hold the cutter when it is not being used. The retractable blade can remain extended this way between uses. This particular stand shown in the photos is Black Walnut. This display stand is meant to make the whole project look like a functional-art sculpture, while it serves it's functional purpose of the Rounding Jack safely.

To make the cut. The blade guard knurled nut is loosened, the blade dropped down and the nut retightened. The slider nuts are loosened and the desired cut width is indicated by the pointer, and the slider nuts are tightened. The hat is placed on a wood crown block to give a firm resistance to the pressure being applied with the cutter, and the brim is placed between the bottom brass plate and the bottom of the cutter. Then, depending on whether the hatmaker is a Clockwise, or a Counterclockwise cutter, the Rounding Jack is slowly moved around the contour of the crown while pushing the cutter toward the center (head). Felt Hat Blanks are very expensive, so after the cutting is complete, a big sigh of relief is heard from the hatmaker.



The Adjustable Brass Crown Band on the front of the cutter is used when the brim is to be cut wider on the sides, than on the front and back. By adjusting the curve of the brass band, the cutter is pushed away farther on the wider curve of the crown sides.

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Artisan Hat Tools by Mark DeCou Studio
(Do you want to see More? Just follow these links):

NOTE:
ALL HAT MAKING ITEMS THAT I HAVE IN STOCK
ARE LISTED IN MY ETSY.COM ONLINE SHOP, click here to check inventory

Rounding Jacks, Collector's Editions:
  1. Ebonized Walnut Clockwise with Laser Engraving
  2. Walnut Counter Clockwise w/Laser Engraving
  3. Walnut Uni-Directional Cutter

Rounding Jacks, Deluxe Model:
  1. Maple Deluxe Model, Counter Clockwise Cutter
  2. Maple Deluxe Model, Clockwise Cutter
  3. Walnut Deluxe, Counter Clockwise Cutter
  4. Walnut Deluxe, Clockwise Cutter

Rounding Jacks, Hobbyist-Hatter Model:
  1. Walnut Hobbyist-Hatter Model, Counter Clockwise Cutter
  2. Walnut Hobbyist-Hatter Model, Clockwise Cutter

Bench-Top Display Stands for Rounding Jacks:
  1. Walnut Bench-Top Display Stand
  2. Oak Bench-Top Display Stand
    Click here to check inventory

Customized Rounding Jacks, Personalized for Specific Hatters:
  1. Spradley Hats in Apline, TX
  2. Rachel Pollock of La Bricoleuse
  3. Brainpan Hat Shop in Sumner, WA
  4. Steve Delk's Adventurebilt Hat Co.
  5. Marc Kitter's Adventurebilt Hat Co.
  6. Pyrate Trading Co.
  7. Hatman Jack at Wichita Hat Works
  8. Inaaya Hat Co.
  9. Penman Hat Co.

Formillons & Conformateurs:
  1. Complete Restoration of a Maillard Conformateur and Formillon
  2. New DeCou Formillion & Conformer, Prototypes #1 & #2
  3. Custom Designed Conformateur Carrying & Storage Case
  4. New Plot Base Board for the Maillard Allie Formillon
  5. Maple Wrench for Tightening Formillon Thumbnuts

Foot Tollikers:
  1. Left-Handed & Right-Handed Foot Tolliker
  2. Foot Tolliker: Elk Antler & Birch Wood, on a Display Stand
  3. Foot Tolliker: Walnut Wood, on a Display Stand
  4. Foot Tollikers: Three in White Birch Wood
  5. Foot Tollikers: Walnut Wood Set of Four
  6. Foot Tollikers, Birch Wood Double Set, on Display Stand

Brim Edge Curling Tools:
  1. Hinge-Shackle Curling Tool for the Homburg Hat
  2. Full Circle Shackle Curling Tool
  3. Half Circle Shacking Curling Tool
  4. Groove Tolliker Curing Tool

Band Blocks:
  1. Thick Poplar Wood, Various Sizes and Oval Shapes, with Tapered Sides

Crown Blocks
  1. Long Oval Crown Block Sculpting Work

Hat Block Spinners:
  1. Late Turned Hat Block Spinners

Flange Stands:
  1. Heavy Duty Flange Stands

Puller Downers:
  1. Puller Downers

Pusher Downers:
  1. Pusher Downers

Hat Racks, Hat Stands, & Cedar Band Blocks:
  1. Hat Racks to keep oval shapes

Stainless Steel Slip Stick:
  1. "Coming Soon", please check back.

(Note:This project story, project design, and photos are protected by copyright in 2008-2010 by the Author, M.A.DeCou., all rights reserved, no use allowed without expressed written permission.)

Gallery

Comments

· Registered
Joined
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2,053 Posts
These tools are sure from another century. The quality and attention to detail is something you hardly see anymore. Maybe in some antique tools. It just has to rub off on the craftsmen who use these tools to make hats.
 

· In Loving Memory
Joined
·
2,704 Posts
yea, what he said. you dont see those things around anymore.
 

· Registered
Joined
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703 Posts
I get to see the vintage ones quite often, and they were cheaply built out of soft pearwood or poplar, always broken, split, missing parts, and pretty rinky-dink.

Still, they sell on eBay at pretty high prices since they are so rare. I'm hoping to give people another option.

I restored one this week for a guy that bought one on eBay that was missing a critical part. He's going to resell it with my name on the restoration and new part fabrication for it, and then use the money it raises toward one of my new ones. I hope he starts a new trend.

I've also been doing some preliminary planning for making a line of one-of-kind woodworking Block Handplanes, with the same goal in mind. Functional-Art for the discriminating woodworker. I hope to get that started some time later this year.

From Kansas, where we are fixing the rounding jack world, one at a time,
M
 

· Registered
Joined
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19,732 Posts
I always like your unique projects.
 
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