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"My purpose in compiling this book was
to preserve the knowledge of how to make professional quality
handmade hats, to take the mystery out of millinery, and to make
this information easily accessible to everyone. Now, in the twenty-first
century, we have all sorts of materials available to us that were
never dreamed of by the milliners of old. I want to encourage
you to experiment and try them all.
So many of the traditional millinery supplies are becoming obsolete
and unobtainable that it will be necessary to explore alternate
resources and alter our methods to suit the new materials. I have
seen stunning headdresses made from chair caning and leather,
styrofoam, plastics, and other assorted objects. Perhaps you will
be the one who comes up with the next wild and wonderful idea.
Begin by paying attention to the new products that modern technology
offers for uses other than hatmaking and see if they can be adapted.
Without such experimentation, little progress will be made in
the field of millinery. If the art is to survive, we must try
new things; along the way we'll find faster, easier, or better
methods than those currently being used.
Whenever you are trying out new methods or materials, keep in
mind that it is the final appearance and effectiveness of the
finished hat, not the technique or materials by which it was created,
that will determine the success of the hat.
After you have made several hats you will naturally become hat-conscious.
Hats, and possibilities for hats, will begin popping out of magazines,
movies, paintings and store windows. When this happens, stop and
analyze the hats. What materials were used, what is the shape
of the foundation, how is the hat held in place, how could you
have improved upon the design or construction?
Continue to develop your powers of observation as you search out
the new and different. Observation, you will find, will become
not only your best teacher, but also your best source of inspiration.
So go ahead, jump in and try out those crazy new-fangled ideas.
From the Neck Up: An Illustrated Guide
to Hatmaking is a book of timeless, traditional techniques.
It's a great place to start learning the techniques. And once
you've got the basics figured out you can begin to experiment.
That's what makes millinery so exciting. It's creative, it's expressive
and, most of all, it's fun!"

DENISE
DREHER is a well qualified, experienced milliner who has
studied and worked in costume construction, design and history
in both educational and professional theater. She began her millinery
studies at the Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis where she was assistant
to the milliner. After the Guthrie internship, Ms. Dreher received
a grant from the State Arts Board to study theatrical and historical
hatmaking.
She spent three years researching in theaters, museums and libraries
in the United States, Canada and England. During that time she
combed through the book and photo collections at the Library of
Congress, the New York Public Library, the British Museum library
and the archives of the Metropolitan Opera. She studied period
clothing and hat design in the costume collections of the Minneapolis
Institute of Arts, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Brooklyn
Museum.
While living in London, Denise worked for six months as a staff
milliner at Berman's & Nathan's, one of the largest costume
houses in Europe. She has traveled extensively, teaching hat workshops
in both the United States and Canada including U.C.L.A., the University
of Michigan, and at the national conventions of the National Costumers
Association, the American Theater Association and the United States
Institute for Theater Technology.
Some of Ms. Dreher's hatmaking credits include
Amahl and the Night Visitors
and Les
Miserables for American television, Prince
Regent - a BBC series, and the films The
Great Train Robbery and The
Empire Strikes Back.


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