Shanghailander
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 202
- Location
- Pennsylvania
Those of you who have been following my travel thread here at the Fedora Lounge as I circumvent the globe will know that I am now in the UK, and there is a serious dearth of hats here - not even baseball caps are common!
However, today, Sunday, November 12, I attended the Remembrance Day parade in London. Thousands of Britons march, many from the military, but also civilians who were interned during the war, or were part of the many volunteer aid detachments (air raid precautions, etc) which were part of the civil defense during WW II.
Of course there were thousands of military hats in evidence - peaked caps, service caps, Australian slouches, and even Ghurkas.
But many of the middle aged and elderly veterans wore civilian dress, as well as their medals. And a large portion wore a dress hat. I spotted at least a dozen fedoras, but you should have seen the bowlers!
There must have been at least a hundred or more of them - this must be the last place in the world where you can walk down the street and see groups of men, a dozen or more, all wearing bowlers. Most of these men were in their seventies and eighties, though a few middle aged guys were wearing them as well.
Alas, I did not have my trusty camera with me to record this for the lounge!
Tomorrow, all those bowlers will go back in the closet, and the streets of London will once again be filled with hatless heads, and a few proud souls, such as myself, modeling a fedora, or as they call them here, Trilbys.
Is there a difference between a trilby and a fedora? The one fellow wearing one didn't seem to know.
However, today, Sunday, November 12, I attended the Remembrance Day parade in London. Thousands of Britons march, many from the military, but also civilians who were interned during the war, or were part of the many volunteer aid detachments (air raid precautions, etc) which were part of the civil defense during WW II.
Of course there were thousands of military hats in evidence - peaked caps, service caps, Australian slouches, and even Ghurkas.
But many of the middle aged and elderly veterans wore civilian dress, as well as their medals. And a large portion wore a dress hat. I spotted at least a dozen fedoras, but you should have seen the bowlers!
There must have been at least a hundred or more of them - this must be the last place in the world where you can walk down the street and see groups of men, a dozen or more, all wearing bowlers. Most of these men were in their seventies and eighties, though a few middle aged guys were wearing them as well.
Alas, I did not have my trusty camera with me to record this for the lounge!
Tomorrow, all those bowlers will go back in the closet, and the streets of London will once again be filled with hatless heads, and a few proud souls, such as myself, modeling a fedora, or as they call them here, Trilbys.
Is there a difference between a trilby and a fedora? The one fellow wearing one didn't seem to know.