Better hats come from Montecristi.
Hello
guys, today’s post I would like to share with you a little bit about
Montecristi, Equador where the better Panama hats come from. This is what I
found. Enjoy reading. In Montecristi, Ecuador live a handful of master weavers,
the creators of the finest straw hats in the world "Montecristi Panama hats". Hats so fine, they almost defy description. Montecristi panama hats
are made from toquilla straw, hand-split into strands not much thicker than
thread and woven so finely.
At
first a panama hat appears to be made from linen. Masterpieces of detail, the
edges of these panama hats are woven back into the brim never trimmed and sewn
like lesser quality panama hats. Each Panama hat is woven by a single artisan,
hand-blocked, and takes months to complete. Because there are so few master
weavers of panama hats left (two generations ago there were two thousand Panama
hat weavers, today there are only about twenty weavers of panama hats left),
these works of woven art are becoming endangered to the point of disappearing.
Montecristi,
Ecuador Panama Hats, this village is internationally renowned for the high
quality of the “Panama hats” they produce (Panama hats are and always have been
from Ecuador and not from Panama). Lying at the foot of a large hill called
Montecristi, the small town of the same name has many attractions such as Eloy
Alfaro’s (an ex-Ecuadorian President) house, the Hermanas Largacha Museum, and
the Monserrate Sanctuary, where thousands of Ecuadorian and foreign pilgrims
traditionally flock, especially on the weekends. Another place of interest is
La Pila, whose artisans make a variety of sculptures and replicas of
Pre-Colombian ceramics. In addition to hats, these artisan centers display
other handmade crafts made of different types of straw and iron.
Modern
day Panama hat design was originated by one Francisco Delgado. In Spanish, the
word delgado means thin, and thin are the fibers which make the finest Panama
hats. He lived in the coastal Manabi area of southern Ecuador in the 1700s. Due
to the fineness by which the native Americans split the fibers, as with flax,
the finest of finest Panamas look like silk and cost from $10,000 or more on
the retail market. Why? This quality represents many months of work of one
individual! Panama hat production in fact is a God send to the weavers, for
it's the only income the weaver's families have.
It
is erroneously stated on some websites that Panama hats are pretty much
exclusively blocked, finished, bleached and dyed in Cuenca no matter where they
were woven. Well, these processes of course do occur in Cuenca to a
considerable degree because the exporters are chiefly in Cuenca. But finishing
and blocking etc. are not exclusive to Cuenca since the province of Manabi is
the center of the weaving itself.
The
coastal town of Montecristi of Panama hat fame is a little hyped as well in
that most hats are actually woven outside the city limits in country cottages
and in villages generally in Manabi and Guayas provinces. If Panama hats were
only produced in Montecristi, every citizen of Montecristi man, woman, child,
dog, cat and chicken would have to be working 24/7 just to keep up with demand.
And there is a lot of weaving going on in Cuenca and surrounding areas as well.
So things are not as localized as one might gather from some information on the
web.
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