Jovan
Suspended
- Messages
- 4,095
- Location
- Gainesville, Florida
If enough men's stores still sold hats, this probably wouldn't be a problem for the curious salesman.
Miss Neecerie said:You 'fix' by asking -them- if they sell lice shampoo.... lol
nulty said:Taking your hat off in a public place where it's not necessary to so do and setting it down in front of someone where they can oogle it and drool over it is just an invitation for them to plop it on their infested nob. You're almost asking them to grab it just by setting it in front of them. It's a vicarious reaction on the part of the grabber....
I don't remove my hat if I'm wearing a fedora in front of anyone who is providing me a service. At a counter or a diner or a bar it stays on. In a restaurant as I'm being seated the hat glides form my head and stays in my hand till I can get it to a safe place.....
Other than the other socially mandated situations where a hat comes off ,it stays on the head and adds to the general ambiance of where ever I happen to be....
mingoslim said:So that you can try them on.
Make sure to tell them, in a very complimentary way, how nice their pants are first . . . .
RBH said:I do not care to let just anyone put my hat on.
Most of the time I leave it on my head.
Jovan said:The reason is probably because they see it as a costume-y thing, and don't think twice that you'd get annoyed. Would they do the same with a pair of sunglasses? I doubt it. Ask that of them if anyone does it again.
jimmy the lid said:...In the Old West, anyone pulling such a move would be "toes up" in no time.
In any event, I am always acutely aware of where I leave my lid, and take pains to guard against the random curiosity of the hat-less...
Colby Jack said:I think there is also a general lack in manners.
nulty said:...You're almost asking them to grab it just by setting it in front of them. It's a vicarious reaction on the part of the grabber...
Sefton said:Pomade. A greased head might discourage the curious from doffing your hat without asking. Of course if they have an equally greasey noggin' you might end up mixing their crude with your balsamic...
Vintage Betty said:I've never heard of anyone doing this...
mingoslim said:So that you can try them on.
Make sure to tell them, in a very complimentary way, how nice their pants are first...
tandmark said:...That's why I wouldn't lie a hat on a shop counter, *especially* not on its crown.
When most people lie a hat or cap on the counter, they lie it there brim-down...
tandmark said:...When a serious hat person lies their vintage Borsalino on a counter, it's going to be on its crown...
tandmark said:...Clueless shop assistant sees this. Assumes there was some motive for such an eccentric gesture. Perhaps thinks, "The customer must want me to admire their hat, and the brim being up makes it very convenient to grab, so the customer will be pleased the most by my trying the hat on myself."
tandmark said:...Actually, I wear my hat indoors, as long as I'm in a public space. At my desk, it comes off. In a hallway or elevator, it stays on.
That's admittedly not quite the same as following the hat-etiquette I was taught years ago. But at least no one is going to grab a hat right off my head...
nulty said:...In my mind a hat worn with dignity and pride is a sign post to others that I feel a certain way about my self. Removing it in certain social situations is a way of saying OK I'm giving this part of myself at this moment. Either as a way of respect politeness or kindness...
Miss Neecerie said:I still think.."Excuse me, I am a bit lost, do you know where the nearest drugstore is, was on my way to fetch some lice shampoo and I must have taken a wrong turn, so came in here to ask where I was"
would be the best
Time for the ultraviolence.deanglen said:How I feel when someone picks up my hat and puts it on without asking. And they do, often!
dean