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Hat articles and photos...

LuvMyMan

I’ll Lock Up.
Messages
4,558
Location
Michigan
So...what's his FL screen name?
Humm.....sadly I would have to guess he would never be on the Lounge. I say this as if he was, I'd welcome him and then start to see if I would be able to reason with him to turn his life around, and to hope he could understand that "good" is a far stronger place for the Human race, then "bad". Lord knows we sure have enough "bad" around the entire world. Not sure he looks very good in a Fedora? My Husband thinks Ol' Kim, would look better in handcuffs!
 
Messages
19,434
Location
Funkytown, USA
The Wall Street Journal published a pretty good article on men's hats a couple of days ago. Except for the ending (where they suggest cocking your hat is a no-no) it's pretty good. Also discusses the decline of the stingy brim.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/men-you-can-pull-off-a-hat-this-summer-1466022131

Unfortunately behind a paywall...

Edit: Opening in Chrome Incognito got me to the article.

Double Edit: Yup a good and fair article. I think your impression is the same as mine, Kao. I also disagree with the advise not to cock your hat. It doesn't have to be drastic, and I think on most folks, the high angle cock looks "affected," but all men can look good with a little "hattitude."
 
Last edited:

rocketeer

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,605
Location
England
I love the full traditional dressage look though it does not suit me. Personally despite the chance of serious head injuries I think it should be a choice. Next on the list will be the Spanish riding hat(Sombrero) and Rodeo western styles(Cowboy hats to the layman) will all come under health and saftey.
 

Joao Encarnado

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,776
Location
Portugal
I love the full traditional dressage look though it does not suit me. Personally despite the chance of serious head injuries I think it should be a choice. Next on the list will be the Spanish riding hat(Sombrero) and Rodeo western styles(Cowboy hats to the layman) will all come under health and saftey.
Just wait for the equestrian seat-belt law...
Next is removing the human and leave the horse alone doing all jumps.
And after that, it looses it's interest and become a pointless sport.
 

nvilletele

One of the Regulars
Messages
137
Saw this article today, and thought the slideshow of 45 pics might be of interest to some folks. Couldn’t find an existing thread for such things.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/...hat-headwear-fashion-style-tradition-culture/

Here are a few examples.

2319FFA9-3999-4FC6-AAB3-15F602AE7CCB.jpeg
F621C59C-EFE9-49A7-8BD1-08CA89DE55EC.jpeg
89C03873-EFAB-4C1B-9FF9-A5E8B9780344.jpeg
8C194704-C1ED-4FA5-AB7F-1511A8ADDE0E.jpeg
1D589524-8887-4A2C-ACE1-140753D806BF.jpeg
47FC19BE-6E25-4B56-83D1-CBB07819C636.jpeg
 

Corky

Practically Family
Messages
507
Location
West Los Angeles
https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/strange-properties-and-histories-magic-hat


The Strange Properties and Histories of the Magic Hat


On wishing hats, top hats, the Helm of Death, and other mystical headwear.

A telling aspect of the magic hat, as a physical thing, is that its form is often mundane, appearing in the shape of a traveler’s or laborer’s hat, such as a cap or a simple fedora. Described as a “coarse felt hat” in an English play about a wishing hat published at the turn of the seventeenth century, and in a nineteenth-century Grimm’s fairy tale as a “little old worn-out hat” that “has strange properties,” it is similarly defined in many stories.

The magic hat’s association with the commonplace has continued into modern times. For example, the top hat used in the magician’s show, though linked with the wealthy, was a style worn by many men and women who lived on the lowest rungs of the class system. The Harry Potter Sorting Hat, so probing that “there’s nothing hidden in your head / The Sorting Hat can’t see,” was an old, bent “pointed wizard’s hat” that was “patched…frayed and extremely dirty.” The sacred hat, too, in many cultures has been based, like the magic hat, on the commonplace.

A cap, as a hat form, is one of the oldest types of headwear. The etymological root of the word cap, as historian Beverly Chico plausibly suggests in her encyclopedia of hats, comes from the Germanic haet, meaning “hut,” and is connected to the Belgic Briton word cappan, meaning “wattle huts or cabins.” In these meanings, she sees the cap as a covering akin to architecture.
(Cont'd at link)

https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/strange-properties-and-histories-magic-hat

hatinset.jpg
 

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