FedoraFan112390
Practically Family
- Messages
- 646
- Location
- Brooklyn, NY
Besides being an item of fashion, I believe hats have some very practical uses:
1) Can protect the head from hitting into things above you. For example, if you're coming into a low doorway, rather than bump your head, your hat will sort of alarm you to the bump or cushion the blow. For fedoras and the like, the brim could serve as a bit of a cushion to a fall.
2) The obvious practical usage of a hat as protection against the cold or inclement weather; Others types of hats can provide some protection against the heat and keep dirt out of your face.
3) The historical usage of a hat to store things (for example, Lincoln storing his letters and important papers in his Topper)
4) Using your hat to take the glare off something you're trying to read (Got this from Hatless Jack--Wherein LBJ and another senator used their hats to shield Robert Frost's poem from the sun's glare so he could see it better.)
Anyone think of some other practical uses for a hat?
1) Can protect the head from hitting into things above you. For example, if you're coming into a low doorway, rather than bump your head, your hat will sort of alarm you to the bump or cushion the blow. For fedoras and the like, the brim could serve as a bit of a cushion to a fall.
2) The obvious practical usage of a hat as protection against the cold or inclement weather; Others types of hats can provide some protection against the heat and keep dirt out of your face.
3) The historical usage of a hat to store things (for example, Lincoln storing his letters and important papers in his Topper)
4) Using your hat to take the glare off something you're trying to read (Got this from Hatless Jack--Wherein LBJ and another senator used their hats to shield Robert Frost's poem from the sun's glare so he could see it better.)
Anyone think of some other practical uses for a hat?