deano said:
this is my first lid
not sure if I can pull it off
I do try to wear it with attitude.
But are sometimes bothered by what I wear with it.
Would be greatful of any tips a nd what you think.
I would love to get a vintage lid.
Not seen many on eBay in England.
Thanks
deano[/QUOTE]
I think it looks good as is. The only addition I would make is what my local hat man told me twenty years ago--better to pull it down farther on your brow so that the hat maintains a level line when seen from the side. That as opposed to wearing it tilted back. A little counterintutive, but that's what he said, and in that's the way I do it, because I agreed with his advice. Apart from that, the stingy brim looks good on a young fellow like you. Over time you may want to try wider brims and taller crowns. Best thing is to find a hat store where there are a lot of different variations so you can try many of them in one visit. That would sharpen up your judgement about what works best on you.
thanksdanofarlington said:I think it looks good as is. The only addition I would make is what my local hat man told me twenty years ago--better to pull it down farther on your brow so that the hat maintains a level line when seen from the side. That as opposed to wearing it tilted back.
Rules not so strict--what rules--and many may argue with what I said. You should do what makes you comfortable and makes the hat work for you. I did notice though that before my hat-man's comments my tendency was to tilt the hat back a lot, but that by pulling it down level it's a more kind of adult look which I decided I liked, this was post-age 35 for me. So level is the look for me, others should do what they want, no rules. On the hat with clothes, yes ever since wearing hats I decided they are a dressy thing and go best with some level of dressiness, for me meaning no T shirts with hats (just watch for the brickbats coming this way now). Some hats are really dressy as you say. But being way post-35 years old now I use a lot of suits, sport coats and nice shirts and it's easier to blend hats in with those. Hats and that kind of clothes seem to go naturally together. Of course in the winter you've got jackets and coats, and hats are easier to match up with jackets than summer casual clothes. All in all, hats are fun and they are distinctive, can look good with the right hat, but you enter into this thicket of styles, brims, crowns and matching that is hard to escape. You can't ignore it all because the hat may look dumb if something is wrong. The only solution IMHO is to dedicate a certain amount of mirror time with the various permutations and see for yourself what's good, what's so-so, and what is downright bad.deano said:thanks
I was told by the shop that tilt back for a more casual look and straight for more formal. The brim isn't the smallest I've seen it's somewhere in the middle. Over here this is called a trilby as you prob know already.
I found if worn back ferther I can get away with less formal cloathes. Is this wrong?
I also don't wear suits for work, so when people I know see me smart and wearing a hat that find it odd.
I'm trying to wear it often so poeple get used to me in one,
I do love the wider brim but think I would have to be more dressed up to pull it off.
rlk said:
rlk said:
Sold as a 7-1/4 but has the usual 3 tags with 7-1/8 though stretched to almost 7-1/4. Black with "Oxblood" trimmings. Once Chicago's largest Hatter, apparently quantity over quality[huh] Someone tried to IJ Bash the crown, unfortunately unaware what a Homburg was