J. M. Stovall said:So what's the story with those smoking hats? I seem to remember seeing them in some old movies, but what is the origin of those anyway?
They look like a short fez.
********J. M. Stovall said:So what's the story with those smoking hats? I seem to remember seeing them in some old movies, but what is the origin of those anyway?
They look like a short fez.
Tonack is the big Czeck company that is making hats for everyone including Dobbs and Stetson .
geo said:Well, that's a very Golden Era-like situation. In an Agatha Christie book set in the thirties I just read, Poirot was complaining that "nowadays everything is made in Czechoslovakia".
geo said:Could anyone comment on the quality of Lock's hats? There's only one model that has the right look, in my opinion, and that's the "Chelsea". Has anyone examined these hats from up close? Are they worth the 160 pounds that they're asking?
http://www.jameslock.co.uk/prod2.taf?groupId=100007&_UserReference=E74326F785866E5F44170CAA
geo said:... Poirot was complaining that "nowadays everything is made in Czechoslovakia".
John in Covina said:********
If I remember correctly they come in at a time when cigars and all things from the East come into fashion, Particulary in GB when their military men are returning home from the far flung parts of the Empire so prior to 1900 (1870-1890?) you get wave after wave of colonial influences. They do look like a fez but they also look like a chinese styled cap with tassle added especially in a satin or silk type fabric.
A smoking hat especially paired with a smoking jacket was to protect ones clothing and hair from the oily smoke smell of a fine cigar or other smoking items, pipe or hooka (the hubbley bubbley) so you may indulge and yet rejoin polite society without reeking.
Gentlemen You may Smoke.