This keeps coming up and we don't have anything close to an answer.
Rlk put together some great information on the origin of the term "fedora" and the way in which hats with that label changed from the late 1800s into the early 1900s. Now, let's try to define the term as we understand it today.
I like CptJeff's suggestion that a fedora must be made of a single piece of material, rather than a cut-and-sewn approach. Of course, that would exclude all straw hats and any of those wild two tone hats, where a crown of one color sewn to a brim of another, as well as those WalMart caps that noone wants to call fedoras.
And what about the brim? Does it have to snap? Can it be curled? When does a fedora become something else - like a cowboy hat?
The wikipedia entry is beyond epic failure, so let's see if we can put together anything better.
Take your shot.
Rlk put together some great information on the origin of the term "fedora" and the way in which hats with that label changed from the late 1800s into the early 1900s. Now, let's try to define the term as we understand it today.
I like CptJeff's suggestion that a fedora must be made of a single piece of material, rather than a cut-and-sewn approach. Of course, that would exclude all straw hats and any of those wild two tone hats, where a crown of one color sewn to a brim of another, as well as those WalMart caps that noone wants to call fedoras.
And what about the brim? Does it have to snap? Can it be curled? When does a fedora become something else - like a cowboy hat?
The wikipedia entry is beyond epic failure, so let's see if we can put together anything better.
Take your shot.