- Felt hats should be cleaned with a soft brush in the direction of the pile.
- Remove stains from felt hats with a mixture of ammonia and denatured alcohol or alcohol, taken in equal quantities. Moisten a piece of cloth with this mixture and wipe the hat, being careful not to wet it too much so that the shape does not change. Then dry the hat with a dry towel, comb it with a brush and dry it.
- Try rubbing fresh grease stains with a crust of black bread. If that doesn't help, remove them with gasoline or stain remover.
- Lightly rub worn, shiny areas on the felt hat with fine-grained sandpaper. You can also try this method: sprinkle with salt and scrub with a stiff brush.
- Fur hats can be cleaned with gasoline: dampen a cloth with it and wipe the fur along the pile.
- Clean leather hats with an onion cut in half. As soon as the top layer of the onion becomes dirty, cut it off.
- Suede hats, if they are not very dirty, can be cleaned with fine salt - just don’t do this too often, the suede will become shiny.
- Remove stains from felt hats with a mixture of ammonia and denatured alcohol or alcohol, taken in equal quantities. Moisten a piece of cloth with this mixture and wipe the hat, being careful not to wet it too much so that the shape does not change. Then dry the hat with a dry towel, comb it with a brush and dry it.
- Try rubbing fresh grease stains with a crust of black bread. If that doesn't help, remove them with gasoline or stain remover.
- Lightly rub worn, shiny areas on the felt hat with fine-grained sandpaper. You can also try this method: sprinkle with salt and scrub with a stiff brush.
- Fur hats can be cleaned with gasoline: dampen a cloth with it and wipe the fur along the pile.
- Clean leather hats with an onion cut in half. As soon as the top layer of the onion becomes dirty, cut it off.
- Suede hats, if they are not very dirty, can be cleaned with fine salt - just don’t do this too often, the suede will become shiny.