FedoraFan112390
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While we've seen a limited hat comeback this year, do you we'll ever see hats come to the fore front of fashion the way they were once?
thunderw21 said:In order to have a fedora comeback on such a grand scale you also must have a comeback of the suit, tie and every piece of clothing that has been dying in the last 30-40 years.
thunderw21 said:In order to have a fedora comeback on such a grand scale you also must have a comeback of the suit, tie and every piece of clothing that has been dying in the last 30-40 years.
So no, I doubt they will ever make a comeback in our lifetime if ever.
Bantam Man said:History, in short, does not repeat itself.
In its heydays, a fedora was more than just a piece of fashion. Hat-wearing was a part of social culture. Although hats may return to fashion, every now and then, that culture cannot return ...because the times have changed.
fftopic: Sometimes I think an analogy can be found in the history of jazz. In the late forties and the fifties of the last century, hardbop jazz was a part of popular culture. In the 21st century, plenty of people keep playing hardbop, or listen to newly recorded music in the hardbop style. But this 'neo-bop' music can not again become a vivid part of popular culture, as hardbop was half a century ago, when it was newly created and part of a hip lifestyle.
Just my two cents...
Regards,
Marc Chevalier said:Fedoras? No.
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FurFeltFedora said:If everyone wore a hat like they did in the 50's
Lefty said:As to the hat comeback, here it is in 1982, and again in 1999.
Nice, Lefty...thanks for those links; they should be stickies.Lefty said:Not true.
We've had many threads that talk about hats really starting to die out well before WWII. Check out some of these articles, particularly this one:
Third Source
E. J. Kahn, The Talk of the Town, "Hats On," The New Yorker, September 28, 1946, p. 19
Talk. Stanley expedition to Danbury for an investigation of men's hatlessness. N. Y. is the most hatless city in the country. Danbury itself is not 100% hatted. Factories used to have a rule no employees could come to work hatless; buyers, however, are instructed not to interview hatless salesmen. Twelve per cent of all men never wear hats. 32% always wear hats. 98% of all men over 45 own at least one hat. Only 70% of college men own hats. Only 62% of college men consider hats important to personal appearance, veterans, 68% of them, do. Early in this century U. S. had 25 million males old enough for hats, and the annual production was 36 million; just before the war 50 million hat-males, but production of felts only 22 million. 59% of the women dislike hatless men. Goes into the question of baldness because of hats.
As to the hat comeback, here it is in 1982, and again in 1999.
Bingles said:I personally like being an individual with my hats. It's my "thing", and my friends know me by them... some say they wouldn't recognize me without one. I don't want to blend in like everyone else..
"Any idiot can blend in. It's being different that takes courage."