feltfan
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That has to be the most shameless attempt to get me tojimmy the lid said:I am but a grasshopper in the presence of the venerable feltfan.
buy a round at Trader Vic's that I have ever seen.
Especially when you've got a guy like Dinerman around who
knows as much as any of us and is half my age. And probably
not old enough to buy a round at Trader Vic's, either. BTW,
Dinerman, I have to admit to being the guy who paid a
bundle for that 1942 5X clear beaver:
I've been meaning to post it for a while. I may save it for my upcoming post,
"The Evolution of the Cowboy Hat", which is waiting for my friend to
return my digital camera. That hat was a prize from the New Deal government
and it's a dream of a hat.
Anyway, that said, I think the guy who really gets it here is:
:eusa_clapHarpPlayerGene said:I'm afraid though that the reality is that many of these designations were pure marketing hype and that the names assigned to them developed organically and without much regard to how these whims related to one another over decade after decade of trying to differentiate their product from others.
One thing I really enjoy about the Fedora Lounge is all these people
who are logical thinkers, computer-saavy, or anal retentive collectors
trying to impose order on chaos. I'm counting myself in here!
What is interesting about this is not to say we're all wasting our time.
We are learning a lot here. What is interesting is that this is the stuff
of history. These hats come from a time before computers and even in
some way before cars. Today's mentality is formed by new releases
of software or hardware or automobiles with new features. Progress
marches on in a measureable way today. Version 2.0 is better than
version 1.0; the 2009 Toyota Camry is safer, faster, and has better
fuel efficiency than the 2008. It was looser in the Golden Era-
more style, less calculation.
Hats are frippery. They are visual accents, at least as regards style.
The most interesting part of the passage from "The Cowboy at Work"
that Lefty pointed us to is the THIRD paragraph:
"Very few riders know much about the quality of hats or can distinguish
one from another in respect to quality". Yeah, the hat or something
about the hat's marketing catches their eye. Not because of its standing
in the quality/model/price/felt type matrix.
Which is not to say we shouldn't try. There is stuff to be learned.
BTW, have I mentioned my Resistol 100 "King's 50" with the $50 price tag?