John Penman has made a neat hat hanger in the past but hasn't had any available recently.Check it out on Youtube.
I agree that in the most formal settings (Court, business meetings, places of worship) a hat should not be worn indoors. However, with some young people wearing their pants halfway down with their underwear showing in public and no one batting an eye, I think that hat wearing in any other place these days is really no big deal. I'd rather see tons of people with their hats on their heads sitting down inside a restaurant than one person with their baggy pants and underwear showing.
This bothered me so much that, during a 5-day conference which I recently attended, I ended up wearing an old, unstructured boonie with a floppy brim, just to meals, simply because it had a lanyard that allowed me to 'wear' the hat on my back when not on my head. After eating, I'd return immediately to my room so that I could switch back to the fedora.
If I can get a small 'meal hook' to hang my fedora on the back of my chair, as long as it doesn't leave a pinch mark anywhere on the hat, I'd rather use that instead of resigning to the boonie hat. If anyone has experience with these devices, please share.
I found this is another thread [non-Shorpy All-Stars, I think] - McKinney, TX 1940 - a nice of mix of who is, and who isn't, wearing their hat while dining.
notice everyone who is wearing a hat eating is at the counter ... very common hat etiquette
for whatever reason eating at the counter was ok to be hatted
that is one that always confused me ... as well as the crowded elevator rule
great pic
It's pretty common sense. At a counter, there's nowhere to safely put your hat, whereas the people seated at left have theirs hung on the wall. There used to be provisions for safely storing your hats, wire racks under movie theater seats, hat checks, hat hooks, etc. With the decline of hat wearing came the demise of the infrastructure which allowed for the etiquette. As a result, in modern settings any kind of historic hat etiquette is the roughest of suggestion, not a hard and fast rule.
I made such a device from the elastic cord from a conference name badge plus the clip from another name badge.If I can get a small 'meal hook' to hang my fedora on the back of my chair, as long as it doesn't leave a pinch mark anywhere on the hat, I'd rather use that instead of resigning to the boonie hat. If anyone has experience with these devices, please share.
patrons at the counter aren't allowed to hang their hats as well ?
I don't think your reasoning is why it happened at all ... I think it had to do with not sitting at a table facing your table mates ... a respect thing
That may be your opinion, but that is the basis for that part of hat etiquette. I'm afraid it had very little to do with side to side seating.
There's lots of good period material out there on this topic to read up on, if you have the time.