3 Simple Ways to
Share What You Make

With Instructables you can share what you make with the world — and tap into an ever-growing community of creative experts.

PhotosPhotos

Share one or more photos of a project, recipe, or whatever you've made, quickly and easily.

Step by StepStep-By-Step

Share your step-by-step photos with text instructions of what you made so others can do it too!

VideoVideo

Share your how-to video. You'll need your embed code from a video site such as YouTube.

Checkpoint Charlie Hat

Checkpoint Charlie Hat
This is a copy of a hat my friend Doc Pop brought back from (East) Germany. He got it near Checkpoint Charlie so that's what he calls it; to me it looks more like the hat Governor Tarkin is wearing when he gets insulted by Princess Leia. But either way it's cool.

I made this from a thrift store blazer, rather than buying fabric new. It cost about $9 (in expensive San Francisco) and I'll get another 2 hats from it, easily. If you have fallen in love with yardage, you'll need about a third of a yard -- but take the pattern to the store and lay it out there to be sure.

For the brim, I use a piece of flexible clear plastic of the kind blister packages are made from. Many packages have large flat areas from which the plastic can be reclaimed, although a lot are just too closely molded to the product. I have a stash of flat plastic for brims. Yay reuse!

The only other material needed is a yard or so of quilt binding or wide bias tape for the inner hat band. Tools required are sewing machine (although you could do this by hand as well), pins, and scissors.

Update: pix of one made from paper! http://www.flickr.com/photos/29317731@N08/sets/72157617448800455/
 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up
 

Step 1Pattern

Download the attached ZIP file for the pattern. It contains five files:

charlie_brim.gif
charlie_crown.gif
charlie_flap.gif
charlie_side.gif
charlie_strap.gif

I have not worked out a good way to get a paper pattern into a computer. If anyone has a good idea I'd love to hear it. Anyway I traced these in Photoshop... I didn't take the estimated 4 hours I thought it would take to add the seam allowance, so each of these shows only the stitching line. When you print them out, you'll want to cut a quarter inch out from the line; it may be easiest to draw the cutting line on first.

Also: the sizing is probably not correct. I marked a red line with a number of inches on each file, so you may need to make some xerox adjustments to get that marking to the right length.

Thanks for your patience everyone! Please post pictures of yours!
« Previous StepDownload PDFView All StepsNext Step »
59 comments
1-40 of 59next »
Jun 19, 2009. 3:56 PMjmeowmeow says:
Finally done with my denim realization. Piecing was a little tricky. My next will be in corduroy (with interfacing).

http://www.flickr.com/photos/29317731@N08/sets/72157617448800455/

Oct 1, 2009. 4:53 PMjmeowmeow says:
Thanks! I get complements on the street. Despite (or because of?) its lopsidedness. From a look at the streets of Seattle, hats (or at least cute little caps) seem to be coming back in fashion. Now that I've made one, I look more closely at others. (spell check: not in dictionary: "denim", "Seattle" !?) I can't wait to see DocPop's denim rendition, if he ever slows down and gets a chance to do a little tailoring.
Nov 15, 2009. 4:11 PMjmeowmeow says:
Hat #3.  Gray denim, no front strap, no brim stiffener, extra topstitching.
Jun 3, 2010. 10:20 AMfrenzy says:
This Instructable has won the "I Made It" Challenge, Thanks for being a part of the instructables community!

http://www.instructables.com/community/June-is-I-Made-It-Challenge-Month-Win-a-Pro-Mem/
Jun 3, 2010. 10:50 AMjmeowmeow says:
As modified for Halloween, with a Star Wars Rebel Alliance insignia, stitched red felt on white felt.


May 7, 2012. 7:56 PMastrobug says:
Excellent Instructable, and it turned out to be much easier than it looked! (Though, admittedly, I probably cheated by using fleece)
Nov 9, 2011. 8:54 PMPaymeister says:
Just made one of these: too small, alas! But as a first try I'm quite pleased. Thanks for the instructable!
Oct 28, 2011. 7:38 PMfishydrew3 says:
Thanks so much for making this instructable!!!! Made one out of what I had lying around the house. That one I made too small for my hubby. The second time around got a thift store old wool mens coat & made it prefectly. I did use iron-on stiffing for the bill instead of plastic. My husband loves it, because he can cover his ears when it's cold. Thank you again:)
Jun 9, 2011. 7:33 PMJamtaktics says:
So far, because of my printer, Ive done this all by just looking and measuring...and scissors....however, its coming nicely. Im making mine out of old jeans
Sep 7, 2010. 7:55 PMmamapeanut says:
What a great, sassy pattern! Thank you so much for providing it!

I made mine out of a fleece boucle onto which I applied a light interfacing on the back of all pieces. Instead of using anything (other than the interfacing) inside the brim as a stiffener, I topstitched five lines. The end result is not stiff, but stiff enough to do the job. I realized that the hat was going to be too big the intended recipient according to the given dimensions, so I cut out all pieces on the pattern lines (i.e., not cutting them larger for a seam allowance), then sewed with a 1/4" seam allowance - meaning that each piece was 1/4" smaller on all sides when finished. This worked well for all parts except for the ear flaps, which I wish I'd made longer.

Thanks again for a great pattern. Much appreciated.
Jan 29, 2010. 3:22 PMThav says:
This step is so hard. One side keeps trying to sneak away and then I get these krinkles that make it fit badly. :[
Jan 29, 2010. 5:20 PMThav says:
Thanks! I'll give it a shot. It at least has taught me to use a seam ripper better.
Dec 14, 2009. 5:31 PMneumaics says:
First, thanks for the pattern!

With very little previous sewing experience, I managed to make a couple of hats a while ago.  For the first version, I used unmodified pattern pieces, which turned out to be much (much) too big, so I adjusted the pattern to fit my head better. It serves me well as my work hat, now.

Thanks again. 
Dec 15, 2009. 3:01 PMThav says:
How did you reduce the pattern? I printed them out all at like 90%. I measured the first hat I tried and compared the inner circumference to the circumference of my head and ended up with that ratio. Just wanted to see how you scaled and if it worked out well for you before I try.
Dec 15, 2009. 3:54 PMneumaics says:
  How did you manage to scale them?  I attempted scaling but ran into problems, then decided to modify the pattern pieces instead.

On the side and flap pieces, I removed an inch from the length by taking  it from the center.  I cut a triangle shaped wedge from the top piece, so the circumference removed equaled what I took out of the sides.  I'll make diagrams if I didn't explain well enough.

The bill and band didn't need modification.

I imagine scaling would work better than what I did, especially for smaller iterations where my method would break down, but this was sufficient for me.
Nov 16, 2009. 6:36 PMThav says:
Made it to step four. The pattern was too big for my head. My head is 22". I tried sewing some elastic in between the cap and the flap. I was concentrating so hard on that I put the flap on all sorts of crooked; not centered at all. Going to try again if I can figure out how to reduce the pattern some.

I had a little trouble following step 4. In the third picture, is that the unfinished edge of the flap facing down?

Attached is a picture of where I ended up. I used some flannel, probably about 1/4 yard x 60 inches (no liners).
Dec 15, 2009. 2:59 PMThav says:
No! Never did. I made the flap waaaay too crooked and I had so many stitches through that, some elastic and the sides that I couldn't cleanly undo it. I'm going to try again sometime.
Nov 14, 2009. 8:40 AMjmeowmeow says:
I used a plastic piece cut from a 2-liter bottle for my second hat, and it seems to have picked up a permanent crease.  My first hat used cloth-backed upholstery foam for the brim stiffener, which seems to have endured wear better.  Maybe I'll try topstitching the 3rd hat to stiffen the brim.
Nov 5, 2009. 8:26 PMNetReaper says:
great hat! It suits you well
Nov 2, 2009. 8:35 PMnostahl says:
could we get a pdf version of the pattern pieces so it prints out accurate in size.
Sep 30, 2009. 6:40 PMalnator says:
I was considering making this cap at some point and was curious as to what kind of fabric I should use, I was thinking twill or possibly a cordoroy. Would anyone be willing to make a reccomendation?
May 21, 2009. 3:16 PMkronkoburg says:
COOLEST HAT EVER!
May 10, 2009. 10:40 PMjmeowmeow says:
At the end of this step, is the flap actually sewn or merely basted? The next step (the brim) uses the word "sewn" to describe how the flap is attached first before the brim is sewn over it. I imagine either way would work, since the step of attaching the inner band goes through the flap and crown. Can you believe "sewn" is not in the spelling dictionary for Instructables?
May 7, 2009. 9:40 AMThav says:
I took the gifs you posted and traced them in Inkscape and saved as an SVG format. I set up the spacing so that the dimensions in Inkscape equal the dimensions you wrote on. I also wasn't sure if any of the other patterns needed the seam allowance drawn in, so I only included it on the brim. These should be viewable in Firefox if nothing else.
May 9, 2009. 3:17 PMThav says:
Okay, so I've added seam allowances to the other images as well. I chose either 1/2" or 1/4", whichever seemed like it would work. I look at sewing instructables more than I actually sew so I don't know what's appropriate. If you want to change them and you have Inkscape, if you select the seam allowance path and hit either Ctrl+( or Ctrl+) you can change how far away the allowance is from the pattern itself. I also noticed the font I used on Windows is not available on Linux. Woops.
May 7, 2009. 7:47 AMscott8692 says:
thank you very much
May 7, 2009. 5:56 AMRobotrix says:
What! First of all, using an old blazer for hat material is GENIUS. Secondly, you are a GENIUS! Star Wars reference in a hat making 'ible? i don't think life gets better than this.
Apr 27, 2009. 1:33 PMmuffin1 says:
Also, dose anyone know what "kind" of hat this is?
May 7, 2009. 5:54 AMRobotrix says:
you can find a similar hat called the Cadet Cap
1-40 of 59next »

Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

All Steps Viewing
View all steps of an Instructable on the same page when you're a Pro Member.

Upgrade to Pro today!
242
Followers
52
Author:rachel
I'm a founding member of Noisebridge (https://noisebridge.net), a hackerspace in San Francisco, and Ace Monster Toys (http://acemonstertoys.org/), in Oakland. If you're in the area, stop by and say h...
more »