Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

vintage caps

tropicalbob

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,954
Location
miami, fl
I just reread Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath" recently and was once again blown away by it. There's a passage where he talks about the absolute necessity in those days of having a decent auto mechanic in the family. The photo above could have been an illustration.
 

g.durand

One Too Many
Messages
1,896
Location
Down on the Bayou
1937, migrant farmworkers along Highway 99 (near where I live today). This could well have been my ancestors, but mine couldn't afford the car, so they had to stay in Texas:

Blackthorn--same with my father's family. They were too poor to leave Texas for California in the '30s. But it looks like you and I made it here anyway, two generations later.
 

Blackthorn

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,568
Location
Oroville
Blackthorn--same with my father's family. They were too poor to leave Texas for California in the '30s. But it looks like you and I made it here anyway, two generations later.
Yeah G. Durand, societal evolution, I guess. Interestingly, once we did migrate from west TX in 1954, we "stuck to our own kind," so to speak. All the kids I grew up with were "Okies" like in Grapes of Wrath. All my parents' friends were those who had come west earlier and we were almost an ethnicity of sorts. Living in the bay area, we stuck out from our neighbors, the long time bay area people, but we socialized only with the first generation newcomers. I didn't even realize that was how it was until I was in my twenties looking back on it.
 

Blackthorn

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,568
Location
Oroville
Holocaust refugees arriving at Atlit reception camp in Israel, in 1944, picture copied from Jerusalem Post.

http://www.jpost.com/Not-Just-News/Image-vs-reality-The-story-of-Hansi-Brand-389403

Nov4-1944.jpeg
 

esteban68

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,107
Location
Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England
if it's a studio portrait it's quite likely a prop, a friend of mine has his own photography business and he has loads of props and quite a few costume items etc I've sold him!
That cap would have been quite an expensive and sporty item in it's day I guess....and it does appear to be the exact same hat!
 

Blackthorn

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,568
Location
Oroville
if it's a studio portrait it's quite likely a prop, a friend of mine has his own photography business and he has loads of props and quite a few costume items etc I've sold him!
That cap would have been quite an expensive and sporty item in it's day I guess....and it does appear to be the exact same hat!

I hadn't thought of that. Good call, Esteban!
 

Stuffsmith

Fedora Lounge Artisan
Messages
808
Location
Sydney
I'm sure that's exactly what it is, guys – there are about 25 different images of different guys with that cap on from that photo shoot. It might be my favorite example of an eight dart cap. If it wasn't posted before, this is from around 1926 and they're all Tour de France riders.
 

GregNYC

One Too Many
Messages
1,352
Location
New York City
Blackthorn, what you say about hanging out with your own kind in the SF bay area was very interesting. I lived on Belvedere Island across the bay in the mid 1960s. That was a fairly diverse place, culturally speaking. But upper middle class. There were German and Japanese families, a few old WASP families, some old money too. My family were artists who had lived in CA for many years, but in earlier generations in the U.S., were Okies too. On Belvedere Island, the houses were so large that people tended to keep to themselves. I was like ten years old, so I rode my bike everywhere. I even had a paper route, which is how I got to see who lived in all those expensive houses....
 

Blackthorn

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,568
Location
Oroville
I'm sure that's exactly what it is, guys – there are about 25 different images of different guys with that cap on from that photo shoot. It might be my favorite example of an eight dart cap. If it wasn't posted before, this is from around 1926 and they're all Tour de France riders.

That is all new info for me, Stuffsmith, I had no idea. Thanks for all the insight.
 

Blackthorn

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,568
Location
Oroville
Blackthorn, what you say about hanging out with your own kind in the SF bay area was very interesting. I lived on Belvedere Island across the bay in the mid 1960s. That was a fairly diverse place, culturally speaking. But upper middle class. There were German and Japanese families, a few old WASP families, some old money too. My family were artists who had lived in CA for many years, but in earlier generations in the U.S., were Okies too. On Belvedere Island, the houses were so large that people tended to keep to themselves. I was like ten years old, so I rode my bike everywhere. I even had a paper route, which is how I got to see who lived in all those expensive houses....
Very interesting, Greg. Both of our family histories are pieces of classic Americana. And I also had a paper route. Too bad I didn't know what a newsboy cap was, back then.
 

Simonds

Vendor
Messages
854
Location
Atlanta
There are differences in those french tour caps, note pattern matching and buttons on the straps.

tour cap.jpg
 

Attachments

  • bjones.jpg
    bjones.jpg
    26 KB · Views: 569
Last edited:

Forum statistics

Threads
109,325
Messages
3,078,956
Members
54,243
Latest member
seeldoger47
Top