Quetzal
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 147
- Location
- United States
Plenty of decent hats were made from the later 1960s to the mid-1980s, just as plenty of decent suits were made (thick wool, linen, proper stance, belted backs, patch pockets, there were and are plenty of well-made suits from the 70s, some of you probably own without even realizing their age), many of which are in thrift stores. Proper felt hats, though, are a bit rarer among the then-new/common velour, tweed, houndstooth, and emerging wool felt hats, but they indeed existed. Many movies set in larger cities, especially New York, from the 1970s will have several hat-clad men in the background, obviously not as great in numbers as the Golden Era.
There was even an identifiable shape to hats from then; either small and narrow-brimmed with a triangular crown like some of those from the 1950s and 60s before the stingy-brims (think of the shape of Kojak's or 1978's Clark Kent), or a tall, straight crown like a 1950s Homburgs but with the wide brim worn completely turned down like in the 1920s (think Gene Wilder in Young Frankenstein). Many of these, however, are accidentally labeled as "1950s" or "1960s" hats online, but some can be found in thrift stores or flea markets. Once I was in a Goodwill where 5 1970s hats (two rabbit or beaver in heather brown and medium gray, one of which had a feather, one a black wool, one tweed, one a blue/green velour like Oliver Douglas's from Green Acres, from the look of it, but all in a beautiful condition) were sitting in the Men's Bin, but about 10 people fought and took them in seconds before I made it to the bin.
To conclude, there are indeed good hats from this period, just as there were good ties, suits, shoes, cufflinks, tie clasps, everything else; you've just got to keep your eyes peeled.
-Quetzal
There was even an identifiable shape to hats from then; either small and narrow-brimmed with a triangular crown like some of those from the 1950s and 60s before the stingy-brims (think of the shape of Kojak's or 1978's Clark Kent), or a tall, straight crown like a 1950s Homburgs but with the wide brim worn completely turned down like in the 1920s (think Gene Wilder in Young Frankenstein). Many of these, however, are accidentally labeled as "1950s" or "1960s" hats online, but some can be found in thrift stores or flea markets. Once I was in a Goodwill where 5 1970s hats (two rabbit or beaver in heather brown and medium gray, one of which had a feather, one a black wool, one tweed, one a blue/green velour like Oliver Douglas's from Green Acres, from the look of it, but all in a beautiful condition) were sitting in the Men's Bin, but about 10 people fought and took them in seconds before I made it to the bin.
To conclude, there are indeed good hats from this period, just as there were good ties, suits, shoes, cufflinks, tie clasps, everything else; you've just got to keep your eyes peeled.
-Quetzal