Ok. This is going from something that was meant to be funny and make all of use get a good crack into a philosophical/semantical/economics debate.
My lasts words on the subject:
Q- Is it the material?
A- FOR ME, yes it is. A fedora has been defined and known for being manufactured using felt. Fur or other.
Q- The pattern?
A- Being faithfull to the previous answer, FOR ME, yes, the pattern of the fellow's hat disqualifies it. The only patterns I've ever seen on a felt hat have been on brims and done with fine stitching.
Q-Brim lenght, color.
A-Felt Stingy brims were big sellers back in the day. Don't recall ever seeing a flourescent orange, but again, FOR ME, if you find a felt one in a flourescent tone with a small brim, call it fedora.
Q- How exactly did you observe the marketing of this hat at the museum bookshop?
A- There was no marketing at the museum shop. A fellow lounger posted another thread with this hats piled up and a sign reading fedora. The museum shop (and I happen to work for this museum as well) would never market something like that as a fedora. They are selling a hat, designed by Ron Aarad (who's having a show currently) that was made by Alesi and Borsalino of Italy (the very first one, now they are made somewhere else) the hat is called "cappellone" and although you could shape it as a fedora (the thing is hideous BTW) they aren't advertising it as such.
am I a little mad? yes just a little:rage: All I wanted is for all of us to get a kick out of this. Maybe I'm being too reactionary.
My lasts words on the subject:
Q- Is it the material?
A- FOR ME, yes it is. A fedora has been defined and known for being manufactured using felt. Fur or other.
Q- The pattern?
A- Being faithfull to the previous answer, FOR ME, yes, the pattern of the fellow's hat disqualifies it. The only patterns I've ever seen on a felt hat have been on brims and done with fine stitching.
Q-Brim lenght, color.
A-Felt Stingy brims were big sellers back in the day. Don't recall ever seeing a flourescent orange, but again, FOR ME, if you find a felt one in a flourescent tone with a small brim, call it fedora.
Q- How exactly did you observe the marketing of this hat at the museum bookshop?
A- There was no marketing at the museum shop. A fellow lounger posted another thread with this hats piled up and a sign reading fedora. The museum shop (and I happen to work for this museum as well) would never market something like that as a fedora. They are selling a hat, designed by Ron Aarad (who's having a show currently) that was made by Alesi and Borsalino of Italy (the very first one, now they are made somewhere else) the hat is called "cappellone" and although you could shape it as a fedora (the thing is hideous BTW) they aren't advertising it as such.
am I a little mad? yes just a little:rage: All I wanted is for all of us to get a kick out of this. Maybe I'm being too reactionary.