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Touching your Brim in Greeting.....

Hapi

New in Town
Messages
25
Hi All,

When I wear my Western and am out and about, I have touched my brim when greeting a lady.

So I have a few questions .......

I recently started wearing my first fedora. Does one generally touch their brim in greeting a Lady (or gentleman for that matter) with a fedora, or is that just a Western hat thing? Do you ladies even like that? OK, ladies, do you touch your brim to the gentlemen when you are wearing a hat?
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,074
Location
London, UK
I've never read about it being a thing ladies did. For men, it relates to the military salute (I have a half-remembered memory that the salute developed aping the tipping of the hat rather than the other way around, but I' sure someone better versed can correct me here). I will occasionally do it as a greeting myself, though a considered bow of the head as a sideways angle comes more naturally to me.
 
Messages
19,409
Location
Funkytown, USA
I've never read about it being a thing ladies did. For men, it relates to the military salute (I have a half-remembered memory that the salute developed aping the tipping of the hat rather than the other way around, but I' sure someone better versed can correct me here). I will occasionally do it as a greeting myself, though a considered bow of the head as a sideways angle comes more naturally to me.

I always forget and just give the dorky nod I always have.

We have a whole thread on hat etiquette around here somewhere. That might be it over there under that table...
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,715
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
It wasn't customary for women to tip hats -- they were usually pinned in place anyway -- so there was no need to touch the brim in any kind of salute, assuming the hat being worn even had a brim. Women also weren't expected to remove their hats in church or when saluting the flag or even when eating in a restaurant. You better take it off at the movies though, or some jerk behind you will start kicking your seat.
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Messages
17,190
Location
New York City
It wasn't customary for women to tip hats -- they were usually pinned in place anyway -- so there was no need to touch the brim in any kind of salute, assuming the hat being worn even had a brim. Women also weren't expected to remove their hats in church or when saluting the flag or even when eating in a restaurant. You better take it off at the movies though, or some jerk behind you will start kicking your seat.
.

Ditto at baseball games. In 1942's "Woman of the Year," an oblivious large-hat-wearing Katherine Hepburn is called out several times by the men sitting behind her.
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