davidraphael
Practically Family
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Vintage vs Modern Hats (also how brand names hike the price)
Maybe someone can explain to me what if anything modern hats have going for them...
In the last few of days I visited a couple of long-running hat shops where I tried on some new Stetsons and Maysers, all in the EUR 200-ish price range (US$270). This may be old info for most people here, but it's not often I actually get to hat shops to try things on.
My thoughts:
-- All the hats felt flimsy, lightweight. I didn't feel like I had anything on my head. Maybe that's a plus for some people, but to me it felt like wearing flip-flops for a hike in the mountains.
-- No lining
-- No leather sweatband
-- Disproportionate ribbons: They weren't thin enough to be 'proper thin', nor were they as thick as a classic fedora. Neither here nor there - like a bland hairstyle that is neither long enough or short enough to have character.
-- The majority of hats had a thin leather band instead of a ribbon (though that might just be because of the hat shop locations - Switzerland and Germany)
-- Lack of colour choice: Who decided on hat colour choices - Henry Ford? ("Any customer can have any colour that he wants so long as it is black"). Nearly all the hats were black or 'light black' or 'darker black' or 'mid-black'. Then there were the browns. Not a chocolate rich brown among them - all were a kind of bland, biscuity brown. Again, neither here nor there. I didn't see a single grey hat in the whole store. And you can forget anything more adventurous.
I also tried on a Stetson hateras newsboy. It was EUR 100. The woman in the shop said "I see you already have one"...but I don't; I was wearing my Olney newsboy which, again not only felt more substantial but was about a 3rd of the price. And, as the indicated by the shop owner's response, at first glance she thought I WAS wearing the more expensive Stetson.
Unless you're going to shop somewhere like Optimo (where you can spend a helluva lotta money), is there any point buying a modern fedora?
Maybe someone can explain to me what if anything modern hats have going for them...
In the last few of days I visited a couple of long-running hat shops where I tried on some new Stetsons and Maysers, all in the EUR 200-ish price range (US$270). This may be old info for most people here, but it's not often I actually get to hat shops to try things on.
My thoughts:
-- All the hats felt flimsy, lightweight. I didn't feel like I had anything on my head. Maybe that's a plus for some people, but to me it felt like wearing flip-flops for a hike in the mountains.
-- No lining
-- No leather sweatband
-- Disproportionate ribbons: They weren't thin enough to be 'proper thin', nor were they as thick as a classic fedora. Neither here nor there - like a bland hairstyle that is neither long enough or short enough to have character.
-- The majority of hats had a thin leather band instead of a ribbon (though that might just be because of the hat shop locations - Switzerland and Germany)
-- Lack of colour choice: Who decided on hat colour choices - Henry Ford? ("Any customer can have any colour that he wants so long as it is black"). Nearly all the hats were black or 'light black' or 'darker black' or 'mid-black'. Then there were the browns. Not a chocolate rich brown among them - all were a kind of bland, biscuity brown. Again, neither here nor there. I didn't see a single grey hat in the whole store. And you can forget anything more adventurous.
I also tried on a Stetson hateras newsboy. It was EUR 100. The woman in the shop said "I see you already have one"...but I don't; I was wearing my Olney newsboy which, again not only felt more substantial but was about a 3rd of the price. And, as the indicated by the shop owner's response, at first glance she thought I WAS wearing the more expensive Stetson.
Unless you're going to shop somewhere like Optimo (where you can spend a helluva lotta money), is there any point buying a modern fedora?
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