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I'll measure him up tonight. He may be an 8 for all I know.There are people here with size 7-1/2 hats, Red.... just sayin'
I'll measure him up tonight. He may be an 8 for all I know.There are people here with size 7-1/2 hats, Red.... just sayin'
If the kid you're talking about ends up wearing a huge size, like 7 7/8, p.m. me. FrankYou guys are breaking me up. I too have been cultivating a young hat wearer. We have a young man in our cast at the theater who already has a sense of style. He is in junior high, but is a big guy. He wears bow ties and slacks in his world of, shall we say, lesser dressers. I know he gets a lot of grief, outside of his small circle of friend (mostly theater kids), he has some real issues in school. I have been leading him toward topping off his dapper (for a 14 year old) look with a proper hat. He is interested in each one I wear to the theater each night. We have not sat down to measure his size, but I fear it will be 7 1/2, maybe bigger.
You all have put forth an example for me to follow. Fed, Michael, Eric, I wish to emulate your good karma. Helping this young man find himself in the midst of teen age angst and crazyness is my new quest.
I have never been so grateful to be a part of this community. You people are examples to us all.
Best,
Mike
Will keep you in mind. More of an idea this weekend.If the kid you're talking about ends up wearing a huge size, like 7 7/8, p.m. me. Frank
Thank you, Celia. I believe you, and the others here, all combine to make this a great community. It's so nice, and relaxing... sometimes uplifting, to come here and get away from the stresses of work, bad traffic, rude people, and - ugh - politics.Reading the last couple of pages of this thread has just restored my faith in humanity a bit. This place truly is a great community!
@FedOregon - I believe that kid is going to cherish that hat and remember you for the rest of his life
+1Reading the last couple of pages of this thread has just restored my faith in humanity a bit. This place truly is a great community!
@FedOregon - I believe that kid is going to cherish that hat and remember you for the rest of his life
Okay this post, trust me Fed, is not comparing the great deed of giving the youngster the hat. But it is my story of the great karma of giving a hat. I met a young woman at a workshop and she was telling me about her clown workshop and the prep for her final class/graduation. She needed a real hat for her character and complained she could not find anything affordable. She wanted a real fur hat not a cheapie hipster version. The next day I brought her a black Beaver brand fedora I never wear and thought it would go to a good clown home and at least be put to good use. When I presented it to her she immediately got all verklempt, gave me a big hug, a kiss on the cheek and said it was the nicest gift she had ever received. My first jaundiced thought was if I had known giving hats away would get such a great response I would have given a lot more of them away when I was young and single. Never mind the dinner and a movie date thing.....just give hats to young women in clown school. I last saw her skipping down the sidewalk with a black fedora perched jauntily upon her head.Thank you, Celia. I believe you, and the others here, all combine to make this a great community. It's so nice, and relaxing... sometimes uplifting, to come here and get away from the stresses of work, bad traffic, rude people, and - ugh - politics.
Okay this post, trust me Fed, is not comparing the great deed of giving the youngster the hat. But it is my story of the great karma of giving a hat. I met a young woman at a workshop and she was telling me about her clown workshop and the prep for her final class/graduation. She needed a real hat for her character and complained she could not find anything affordable. She wanted a real fur hat not a cheapie hipster version. The next day I brought her a black Beaver brand fedora I never wear and thought it would go to a good clown home and at least be put to good use. When I presented it to her she immediately got all verklempt, gave me a big hug, a kiss on the cheek and said it was the nicest gift she had ever received. My first jaundiced thought was if I had known giving hats away would get such a great response I would have given a lot more of them away when I was young and single. Never mind the dinner and a movie date thing.....just give hats to young women in clown school. I last saw her skipping down the sidewalk with a black fedora perched jauntily upon her head.
Awesome! What a fantastic example of people doing good for others. Thanks for sharing the story with us! Remind me, when are we meeting at VS this summer? Maybe we can meet for lunch in Eugene with Red on your way down south???Okay this post, trust me Fed, is not comparing the great deed of giving the youngster the hat. But it is my story of the great karma of giving a hat. I met a young woman at a workshop and she was telling me about her clown workshop and the prep for her final class/graduation. She needed a real hat for her character and complained she could not find anything affordable. She wanted a real fur hat not a cheapie hipster version. The next day I brought her a black Beaver brand fedora I never wear and thought it would go to a good clown home and at least be put to good use. When I presented it to her she immediately got all verklempt, gave me a big hug, a kiss on the cheek and said it was the nicest gift she had ever received. My first jaundiced thought was if I had known giving hats away would get such a great response I would have given a lot more of them away when I was young and single. Never mind the dinner and a movie date thing.....just give hats to young women in clown school. I last saw her skipping down the sidewalk with a black fedora perched jauntily upon her head.
I just correct people when they say something like that. One guy called me Juan Valdez when I wore a Penman Indy hat. I just said, "it's more of an Indiana Jones thing, really."I've gotten a mixed bag, mostly good. The good has all been things like, "I love your hat!" and "Where is your hat today?" I haven't gotten anything on my new navy pork pie yet, but give it time. I've only recently (as in since Easter 2015) been wearing hats regularly, but as I'm already the eccentric oddball of my tiny little hamlet, no one bats an eye much. Hence the pork pie: Getting oddball status is easy; keeping it is the real difficulty.
The not so great comments are meant well, but rub me a little wrong. Like the guy who keeps calling me "rabbi" because he thinks the grey fedora over my charcoal overcoat makes me look Jewish. He means well, but it sounds wrong to my ears. The other is the constant "Amish" references I get from another guy (in the same friend circle, too) when I wear my straw fedora. Ergo, I've stopped wearing either one to breakfast on Fridays. I'll try the pork pie next time, just to see what I can dredge up. ;-)
Awesome! What a fantastic example of people doing good for others. Thanks for sharing the story with us! Remind me, when are we meeting at VS this summer? Maybe we can meet for lunch in Eugene with Red on your way down south???
I wanted to add, my daughter is a very introverted person. Only in theater plays does she open up, project a strong voice and "bloom." When we give, like you did, you never know how much you're helping. That was somebody's daughter, it could have been my daughter. Good on you, mate!
That would be cool to buy a Panama from Mike that you had picked out in Ecuador!Sounds good to me. Maybe both. If our trip to Ecuador is successful, we may have some Cuenca hat bodies to deliver...
+1That would be cool to buy a Panama from Mike that you had picked out in Ecuador!