Sam Craig
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,356
- Location
- Great Bend, Kansas
Well said, Sproily
That's a perfect distinction.
Sam
That's a perfect distinction.
Sam
Marc Chevalier said:It's extremely likely that the hats worn in the Fedora and Trilby plays looked like Oscar Wilde's. (Photos taken during his 1882 American tour.)
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AlterEgo said:I'm thinking [Oscar Wilde's] hat may have been similarly hyperbolic for the day, and that the original fedora and trilby were probably more conservative.
Woodfluter said:The title character [of the play Fedora] was described at the time as "a passionate, impulsive Muscovite princess". Fédora Romanoff was a notorious cross-dresser and apparently wore this soft, center-creased man's hat at times.
It looks to me as if Lock and Co. are aiming this definition at the American market (by using the American spelling "favored", for example). The word "fedora" was hardly ever used in the UK before 1980, perhaps as late as 1990; the British word was "trilby" whatever the width of the brim. But language usage changes..."A trilby hat is a narrow-brimmed type of hat. The trilby was once viewed as the rich man's favored hat; it is sometimes called the "brown trilby" in Britain and was frequently seen at the horse races. The London hat company Lock and Co. describes the trilby as having a "shorter [viz., narrower] brim which is angled down [snapped down] at the front and slightly turned up at the back" versus the fedora's "wider brim which is more level [flatter]." The trilby also has a slightly shorter crown than a typical fedora design."
The answer depends on where you live. Style designations like that are mostly local.Is this a Fedora or a Trilby?
You are right, but it's my guess that the compilation of Wiki might have had something to do with the spelling as well as the compiling.It looks to me as if Lock and Co. are aiming this definition at the American market (by using the American spelling "favored", for example). The word "fedora" was hardly ever used in the UK before 1980.
What you read on Wikipedia may be very wrong. As with pre-web technologies it's always important to check the source and it's background knowledge.Today's technology would have given you the answer quicker than writing your post, had you just typed Trilby into Wikipedia, you would have read this paragraph.
and that the fedora got it's name because the main character wore such a hat in the play, named "Princess Fedora"
With all respect, I don't belive you're right. That part of history has been thoroughly looked into by our fellow Lounger Brad Bowers. As I remember it, he re-wrote history quite a bit - and even had some encyclopedia articles changed (not Wikipedia).Yeah, well , that is kinda true