Jim2903
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 142
- Location
- Chicago NW Suburbs
I see more and more people wearing baseball caps.
you know i feel its true about people feeling more comfortable, but i think people also don't know where to go when wanting something custom.
I was in discussion with one of the instructors at the boat building school about the school and he saw my photo on facebook of my new hat. He asked where i got it, so i mentioned Black Sheep Hat works there in washington. The boat school is in washington. Well funny thing happened we talked about hats, and he wanted to know prices, felt quality, everything.
I think people are interested in hats, and wearing them. But also i think price is hard to cope with right now as well for a really nice quality unless you go vintage.
Now, the cool thing about this conversation was he told me about a hat shop located next to the art museum in downtown seattle thats been there since 1930.
So i think the interest is there, and the want of hats is there. I don't think the quality in some states in hat production is there, and lack of shops.
Yes finding hat stores online, and finding custom hat makers is great. But if you can't try it on, feel the felt in your hands, its hard to shop for one.
Especially if your new to wearing a hat, your unsure of styles you like, if they look good on you. The color felt that fits you better with clothing, tons of different factors.
But i do see it becoming more familiar to see other styles then the baseball cap.
Great analysis. Having recently purchased my first fedora I can relate to what you're saying. I haven't found anything available in eastern NC other than the Walmart, etc. variety of cheap fedoras, so the web was my only option. I thought long and hard before taking the plunge and buying a moderately priced ($88 on sale) fur felt from the Village Hat Shop's web site. I had all the same concerns you cited about buying online. Fortunately, it worked out well. The hat fits (that was my biggest concern) and I like the way it feels and looks on me. Wide brimmed fedora sightings are still rare in eastern NC, but hopefully more men will decide to take the plunge if they see some of us out there.
Being 36 and looking younger, I had hesitations that I was being fashion-foolhardy rather than fashion-forward in donning a fedora. I didn't want it to look like I was "trying too hard". But, much to my surprise and pleasure, I started getting comments about how not everyone can wear a fedora and that I wore mine well. So public awareness and acceptance is swinging back in the proper hat direction, I feel.
Now, while styles are as they are among young urban folk, i.e. the flat-brimmed rapper style hats I heard someone mention, at least they're wearing hats. It's just that most other people I see at the job site either keepin it casual and wearing baseball / trucker hats (I'm in telecom, so it's a motley crew of finance, corporate, executive, IT and technical folk) or just nothing at all. Being in Atlanta, you can probably get by more easily without a hat, as anything south of North Carolina isn't really seeing hard winters. I see some flat caps in general, but not so much in the way of fedoras. And it's amazing how a cheap wool fedora like a Jaxon C-Crown Crushable is perfect for keeping rain off you, eliminating the need for a cumbersome but useful umbrella.
So yeah, right now, I'm not really feeling the expense of a proper fur felt and must not have the patience right now to look for vintage on eBay, given my head size (XL - 60/61) and shape (long oval). My cheap Jaxons do well enough for now.
But when the season changes, I'm looking for something in Dobbs - I've seen comments as of late on the lounge that Dobbs does the best wool from a commercial perspective.
I hope hats are coming back a bit more. Maybe if we saw more movies made with modern men wearing hats, it might help. However, I believe it's maybe a regional thing, as we still wear a lot of hats around here, but it's more rural, and unfortunately the ball cap rules and has for 30yrs, but the cowboy hat is still seen some.
I enjoyed the article, but I see hat etiquette a little different.
This is the way it's mostly done around here. Maybe it more Cowboy Etiquette, but it's also more practical.
Remove your hat when visiting people in their home, unless it relatives, then use your own judgement, and if a lot of small kids are around, it just might be the better part of valor to keep it on your head and out of harm's way.
Always remove you hat in church, or anytime there is a prayer being said.
Always stand and remove you hat for the National Anthem or when the stars and strips pass by you, such as at a Rodeo, where a horseman will ride by in the Grand Entry carrying a flag.
Remove your hat when mentioning someone who has passed on.
Remove you hat in front of lady if you think she deserves it, but don't go taking it off every time you pass a woman in the isle at Walmart.
We do not remove our hats, when going into a business, or eating out, as there is no safe place for it, and I don't want to take it off anyway, and it is not generally the custom anymore, unless it's with very important company and a really nice eating place.
Do take your hat off at the movies, although nowdays, with statium seating, it's not really an issue, like it was in the past, when the seating was at a much more gentle slope.
One should take a hat off in a meeting, however, I seldom remove a ball cap, in meetings, unless I am in a very formal one, and people that know me, expect that.
That's hat etiquette You can live with, and is generally the way it's done in my part of the world.
OH! and one other thing, never touch another man's hat, espacally if it's on his head at the time. Of course you can ask to see another man's hat if you like it and want to examine it, assuming you are good friends, and you know he won't mind.
And never yell or call out to someone, with the exclamation "Hey Cowboy!" just because they are wearing a hat, unless you wish to agrivate them, of course women can usually get away with it, espacally if they are pretty.