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One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,325
- Location
- Sanford N.C.
Don't be a hater. Some people make us look better by how they dress.
I would happily pay more to hat check girls if they wouldn't mishandle the hats by crushing the crown and bending the brim. They all do that.
gives me the impression that they would like to wear a hat too but don´t have the balls to do so. It must have been the sixties with the longer hair and the idea of a new era coming that lead to the decline of hatwearing. It was an "old men thing" and had to go. Frank
Those are points that I would have made. I think a lot of men want to wear hats but are afraid, and await the permission of the crowd before they venture into that territory.
I would happily pay more to hat check girls if they wouldn't mishandle the hats by crushing the crown and bending the brim. They all do that.
I see tons of men wearing hats everyday. But today it is the ballcap that is in fashion. All my co workers would never leave the house without their ballcap on their head. Just look around you in a restaurant or in a store you see a lot of ball cap wearing men. The younger guys spend ton's of money on New Era ballcaps they can cost as much as are custom Fedroas if you get into the limited editon ball caps.
Yeah sit your good fedora down or you daily lid for that matter and you'll be relieved of it faster then you sit it down...I'll also mention hair styles: wearing hair short (as in 50s brushcuts) meant keeping your head warm, at least here in the north. By the mid-60s, longer hair (The Beatles) meant less warmth concern, and actually, a desire to keep your locks free-floating and avoiding the dreaded "helmet hair." Now that short styles are back, closer shaved heads require cover, but the knitted beanie seems to have slipped into popularity, even over ball caps among the younger crowd.
Bottom line, it's the YOUTH market that drives styles. Maybe Justin Timberlake and hipsters with their stingy-brim fedoras will light a fad, but it seems not to have so far. Nobody knows how to deal with doffed fedoras nowadays. Except at my (ancient, city) club, most public coat rooms did away with shelves and large hat hooks, and as we discussed earlier this month, there is no safe way to deal with one on a plane or train, so keeping them on more indoors is about the only option...and not really a good one.
A 'good' ball cap can cost between 20 and $30. Good fedoras are considerably more expensive. A cloth ball cap can be washed by machine or in the sink. A fedora can be brushed, but washed in the sink? Reshaping is more than most men want to deal with. A ball cap can be folded or wadded up and put in your pocket, pulled out, and be fine. Most fedoras can't. And ball caps (as well as knitted caps) fit in with our oh-so-cahj society better than fedoras. Fedoras don't stand a chance in the mainstream.
They started going out a long time before then. "Don't trust anyone over thirty" was the saying of 1967. In the UK, hats started to go out in the middle 1930s.Hats went out of style with the baby boomers right when the "don't trust anyone over thirty" concept came into view. Hats were a quick indicator that you were "old" so they went out.
Please celebrate, not lament, when you reach it!Also, I like to think I'm not terribly old yet at 29, but I guess the big three oh is looming.
...Please celebrate, not lament, when you reach it!
knitted beanie seems to have slipped into popularity, even over ball caps among the younger crowd.
Out this way the knitted beanie and other knit caps seem to be more of a political statement for many of the 'youts' these days.
You know what? That's just fine with me (that they will never be mainstream again) because I'm very non-mainstream. I'm very counter cultural in many ways, so it's just dandy with me if the mainstreamers scoff at my hat wearing; it's merely an expression of my unconventional nature. I suspect there are many on this board who feel the same way.