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BigSho said:The temple is a good hat but I don't think many people realize that hats are NOT i repeat NOT supposed to be worn in the rain or snow.
Then what good is a hat without it being a piece of utilitarian wear? I wear mine in rain, snow, sun and everything else. If they don't stand up to that then they are not a hat they are an ornament like you put on a Christmas tree and not worth owning. :eusa_doh: I can then buy an umbrella and dispense with the hat
If you are going to pay what you do for a hat made by the hat factories to day then they darn well better be able to be worn in the rain.
Let's go through this after what I have mentioned and see if I get the logic. Does this pertain to modern hats only or all of them? If it applies to all of them then there is the little sticking point of this ad from the 20s:
to don't wear it in the rain today? When did they stop making hats that are actually supposed to be used in the weather? I don't see any warning labels in the hats that tell you not to wear them in the rain. In the modern Stetsons, they actually should because it is obvious they are useless for rain. The fact is that we have terms like Cravenetted and DuPont processes mentioned on the sweatband of many vintage hats. They were meant to be used in the rain and they were treated for it. They were literally guaranteed to hold up in the rain. :eusa_doh: The old "like water off a duck's back" was another one. So if you mean modern hats aren't meant to be worn in the rain then I can sort of see that but it means we have sunk to new lows in the factory hat business. Their business is then admittedly just hats for show and not utilitarian purposes like they used to be. What a shame.
Regards to all,
J