Naphtali
Practically Family
- Messages
- 767
- Location
- Seeley Lake, Montana
This is off topic, a query about western hats. Is a uniform three-inch brim too short for a western hat with Montana Peak crown to be esthetically pleasing to see worn?
I refer to the top crown, but with panels more sharply defined and crown's peak more pointed. Your graphic appears to be a differently colored campaign hat.J.T.Marcus said:When you said Montana Peak, did you mean this?
Or this?
Naphtali said:I refer to the top crown, but with panels more sharply defined and crown's peak more pointed. Your graphic appears to be a differently colored campaign hat.
Your shortened brim does not appear to be configured in the [modified] tricorn of Western hats with which I'm familiar. Yours appears to be similar to Akubra wide brim shapes.
I live 75 miles north-northeast of Missoula. I hear you. I have a ancient Stetson western hat that has a 2.75-inch brim. Originally, it had a very short crown height. I bashed it into the shape Walter Brennan wore in "Rio Bravo." The hat is no longer wearable -- falling apart with age and use.Erik said:"This is off topic, a query about western hats. Is a uniform three-inch brim too short for a western hat with Montana Peak crown to be esthetically pleasing to see worn?"
To my eye, yes. I live in an area where western hats are common place. I cannot think of the last sub-3.5 inch brim I've seen on a western styled hat. The sole exception being the occasional cattleman's bash Open Road, and then only on an elderly gentleman's head.
********************J.T.Marcus said:When you said Montana Peak, did you mean this?
Or this?
I'm guessing you meant the second one. Mine, in the above photo, has a 4" brim. NOT ANYMORE! It is now 2 3/4" on the sides, and 2 7/8" in front.
I expect to get a lot more use out of it, now.
AHA! 68.5 inches and 140 pounds, marked down from six feet and 162 beautifully assembled pounds.suitedcboy said:I think the answer to this unique to you and your face. Some wide faced persons may look less than cowboy with anythingunder 4inch and may look most ideal with a 4 1/2 inch or even more. A slim person wearing indentifiable western crown shape with a 3 inch brim may look to be completely in his element.
An example of brim not proportioned to the style is a very wide brimmed fedora worn with a zoot suit. Looks exaggerated but in this case, on purpose.
Erik said:"This is off topic, a query about western hats. Is a uniform three-inch brim too short for a western hat with Montana Peak crown to be esthetically pleasing to see worn?"
To my eye, yes. I live in an area where western hats are common place. I cannot think of the last sub-3.5 inch brim I've seen on a western styled hat. The sole exception being the occasional cattleman's bash Open Road, and then only on an elderly gentleman's head.
tonyb said:I'd have to see it before I'd offer an opinion.
There are general guidelines for this sort of thing, but very few (if any) hard-and-fast rules. If people didn't violate convention ... well, I can't even imagine that. It just wouldn't happen. Changing things, for better or for worse or for neither, is what people do.
I tend to think of brims wider than three inches as getting into cowboy territory. But, there are distinctly Western-flavored lids with narrower brims -- half an inch narrower or more, even. And decidedly "urbane" hats have been known to sport brims of more than three inches.