tonyb said:Man oh man, Jimmy, your collection is becoming something special indeed. I happen to have a Chestnut Street lid as well, but mine, a sky blue Stetson 20 Ambassador, is a bit newer -- Dec. 23, 1957.
jimmy the lid said:It's funny how you can go for a long time without seeing a single hat that really grabs you -- then, suddenly, it's raining hats! Thanks for the nice comment, Tony -- the collection is coming along slowly but surely (well, maybe this week, not so slowly...)
Have you ever posted the sky blue Ambassador? If not, would you consider doing so? I believe that my light blue OR dates from that approximate time, and it would be interesting to compare the color.
Cheers,
JtL
jimmy the lid said:Dean, I think "pristine" certainly applies. In fact, the auction photos alone showed the hat in such pristine condition that I really didn't know what to expect in terms of dating -- I thought it could well be of more recent vintage. I really am amazed that it dates to 1948 and has survived in that condition.
It's great to be able to have such a definitive date to work with -- it helps to provide a list of attributes that may help to date other hats, as well.
Cheers,
JtL
tonyb said:It's kinda fun to speculate how that hat remained like new for almost six decades. We have some pretty darned convincing evidence that it was purchased new in December of 1948, so perhaps it was meant to be a Christmas gift, eh? And the recipient never got around to wearing it? For whatever reason. He didn't like the color, maybe. Or it didn't fit. And he meant to take it back to exchange it but never got around to it?
Tony in Tarzana said:But anyway, that is a fine hat as well as a great piece of history, and in my opinion anyway, you got a bargain.
J.T.Marcus said:There's another possibility, too. That generation tended to take care of "good stuff" and only use it for special occasions. A favorite saying was "That's too good for everyday use!"
feltfan said:I think a lot of the 30s and 40s hats we enjoy
sat in the closet because they weren't in style
anymore in the 50s and 60s.
feltfan said:I think a lot of the 30s and 40s hats we enjoy
sat in the closet because they weren't in style
anymore in the 50s and 60s. Similarly, those 50s
and 60s hats were stowed away because hats
went out of fashion entirely. On eBay we sometimes
see hats from a single owner spanning decades, from
wide brim felts to tweed monstrosities.
For some of us, it's hard to imagine a time when
there were fashion trends in hats. They're all
equally out of fashion today.