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Yesterday I had a chance to do something I've wanted to do for a long time. I met my wife for lunch at her office in the costume shop and spent a little while looking through the hat collection in the wardrobe archives. A costume shop hat cabinet is not for the faint of heart. It resembles Frankenstein's laboratory more than a museum or vintage shop. Hats are modified and altered at the whim of the director and designer (often a student). Ribbons are changed, brims are cut, felts might be spray painted. Nothing is sacred. But the shop manager has to make the decision what from her inventory can be hacked up and what cannot. I wanted to see what pearls might be buried in the mud.
I only made it through the fedora cabinet. There were fifty hats stacked tight in there. Most of these have been donated from the estates of elderly Buffalonians so the provenance is almost entirely from old Buffalo stores - some, like Peller & Mure and Kleinhans I knew, many others were marked from small shops I'd never heard of. In the prime hat years, Buffalo was the 8th largest city in the U.S.
Some of the better donations(nice top hats for instance) tend to disappear - often around Halloween. What I found was mostly a mosh pit of 1950s and 60s hats in various states of hat distress. But I did find a couple of interesting hats which Donna let me take home for a little TLC and a closer look.
The first is a Canadian Stetson Premier Stratoliner. A pristine example was sold by Johnny Phi. The color of this hat appears to be the same. I noticed it immediately in the cabinet... it looks very much like my early 1940s Stratoliner, lightweight, but a little heavier than my hat - also 1940s vintage I assume. It's in relatively in good shape with some make-up stains and a very unusual ribbon treatment. I think I'll try another!
I only made it through the fedora cabinet. There were fifty hats stacked tight in there. Most of these have been donated from the estates of elderly Buffalonians so the provenance is almost entirely from old Buffalo stores - some, like Peller & Mure and Kleinhans I knew, many others were marked from small shops I'd never heard of. In the prime hat years, Buffalo was the 8th largest city in the U.S.
Some of the better donations(nice top hats for instance) tend to disappear - often around Halloween. What I found was mostly a mosh pit of 1950s and 60s hats in various states of hat distress. But I did find a couple of interesting hats which Donna let me take home for a little TLC and a closer look.
The first is a Canadian Stetson Premier Stratoliner. A pristine example was sold by Johnny Phi. The color of this hat appears to be the same. I noticed it immediately in the cabinet... it looks very much like my early 1940s Stratoliner, lightweight, but a little heavier than my hat - also 1940s vintage I assume. It's in relatively in good shape with some make-up stains and a very unusual ribbon treatment. I think I'll try another!