JimWagner
Practically Family
- Messages
- 946
- Location
- Durham, NC
Take a look at these photos from the National Archives:
http://www.archives.gov/research/american-west/
The section called Life From the Land has some excellent photos of every day living.
Fascinating pictures. Thanks for the link.
Got me to thinking about why the movies seem so inaccurate as to western hats. Pure speculation on my part:
Hats did seem to change into more modern styles after about 1900. Western movies really got going in the 1930's. I'm guessing that most movie makers back then relied on living memories for how westerners dressed and many of those people would have remembered mostly post 1900. They wouldn't have traveled to the Smithsonian to research hats. No Google either.
They would have likely used hats that were available rather than having custom recreation hats, further biasing the western look in the movies towards post 1900 hats. And establishing the visual language of the cowboy.
Later, when bigger budgets were the norm, then more fanciful creations came about.
75 years later many people take what they see in the movies as fact. And certain real life hat styles have certainly derived their inspiration from movies, completing the circle.
But we can easily see period photographs online now and should be able to separate fact from fantasy.
But, unless you are trying to establish a living history or reenactment does it really matter except as a matter of interest and curiosity?