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Pre-1900 Fedoras?

JTSwifty

New in Town
Messages
9
Location
Detroit
New in town - new question. I've come across a hat in photos from the 1870's to the 1890's. It looks a bit like a sort of Homburg but with a wider brim (see photos: one is signed and dated 1883; the other is a photo of C.H.Spurgeon in London who died in 1892). Does anyone recognize this hat? Does it have a name? Is there anything like it being made anymore?
vintage-beard.jpg

charles_spurgeon.jpg
 
Messages
15,077
Location
Buffalo, NY
In a nutshell, no. Early 20th century (and rarely, late 19th century) soft hats do come up for sale on auction sites and there are a few Lounge members who are thrilled when they do. Some of our custom hatters do period recreations for television and films and might be a source for a new hat in an old style. The soft hat in the second photo moved forward in time as a homburg with a curled and bound brim edge. Homburgs from the 1930s -1950s are relatively easy to obtain in the vintage market, more or less so depending on the size of your head. A mid century fedora with the brim worn up rather than snapped can assume this shape as well.
 

jlee562

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,100
Location
San Francisco, CA
I bet Bob at Black Sheep could tackle this style. Art Fawcett as well. Some of the western hatters like Buckaroo and Knudsen do broad brim hats with rolled brims that look quite similar too.
 

KingAndrew

A-List Customer
Messages
312
Location
Shanghai
There was a great thread about fedoras in the 19th century: http://www.thefedoralounge.com/showthread.php?48956-Fedoras-in-the-19th-Century

In those days, soft hats seemed to range widely in style. But the Homburg look with curled-up brim and tapered center-dent crown was very popular, especially after Edward, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII) took it up.

Pictures seem to show wide brims, stingies, many crown styles and sizes were common. Old photos also show a real mix of what look like "city" dress hats to us, worn in crowds with plenty of hats that would be considered Westerns today. But no soft hat seems as popular during the late Victorian era as the stiff Bowler or Derby hat, which was extremely common. The top hat also remained popular among society's "upper crust."

I love to see the old hats and styles, myself. Of course, I've been known to wear a top hat and bowler now and then, too.
 

JTSwifty

New in Town
Messages
9
Location
Detroit
Found this at Watson's Hat Shop, the "Watson Signature" - it's pretty close:

IMG_2946-watson_signature.jpg


I imagine that if you took the Stetson Bat Masterson and applied the appropriate bash, it too would come close:

83A24EEBD7370E2563485325D7B14EB0_1.jpg
 
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