MisplacedHillbilly
One of the Regulars
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My seemingly ubiquitous Resistol, sporting a pink ribbon for Breast Cancer Awareness month. My fiance is a breast cancer survivor.
Light Gray Stetson St. Regis for mass today.
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My seemingly ubiquitous Resistol, sporting a pink ribbon for Breast Cancer Awareness month. My fiance is a breast cancer survivor.
Love how light that gray that felt is, I don’t think I’ve seen that color St. Regis before.
They seem to be few and far between, that's for sure. Basically the same color as my 150th Anniversary Stetsonian.
Wonderful parade Stefan! That Danubia is sure an interesting brand.It's been a busy week, so not enough time to comment on all the wonderful hats I've seen here (have to reserve some time to find new hats of course).
This week in hats.
Brummel's (in green!)
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Mayser Antilope
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Borsalino Senapa
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Mossant Castor for Gérard Sools
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Line-up was changed halfway through the week and I decided to go for the black hats. They deserve more love. Here goes.
Borsalino Torino
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Borsalino Veccia
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Danubia Chamois
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Barbisio Classic ( the gills get a special mention)
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A Gannon day for sure Eric! Love that pattern of the vents.Morning dog walk in a Gannon Wanderer (inspired by Stetson of sad name) in a green moss. The sun was barely above the horizon when I arrived home and too the pics.
A Gannon Executive (natural beaver felt w/gill ribbon treatment) was my breakfast hat. A bagel and coffee were the menu items during a walkabout the property.
For a quick errand to the hardware store I wore a Gannon Wanderer (granite beaver felt with charcoal trimmings).
I removed the fleece and spent some time pulling up dock supports from the lake in a VS Wanderer (inspired by Stetson hat of said name). I know of no other way other than using a spade and knee deep in the water. This Artlite silverbelly felt is grand.
I needed a shower and a change of clothes from the dirty work early. I changed into a VS Wanderer (granite beaver felt, air vents with a "twist" (opposite of VS ribbon work) for interest.)
Cheers, Eric -
Love that lighter color of gray on this one!Light Gray Stetson St. Regis for mass today.
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Sweet looking Whippet. Great color.Just got back from my 3 mile walk which I try to do every weekend… 70° with a nice strong 8 mph breeze out of the north… I found a quarter on the ground! LOL! Royal Stetson Whippet
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This is one cool looking velour Steve. That wide ribbon and lines really do say 1930s!Brüder Böhm "Böhms Ultima" possibly 1930s. This Velour was made for the Norwegian market. I was lucky enough to acquire it earlier this year via a trade via Panos. I am very happy he found it.
What a great tribute. Looks like a grand time was had by all!Mallory Aristocrat Quality to see Zac Brown Band. Our daughter Megan pulled in her connections allowing the whole family to pay tribute to her Uncle Danny and his favorite band. Special thank you to the band and especially vocalist/guitar John Driscoll Hopkins who went out of his way to make this happen. What an amazing show and fantastic food in the VIP lounge. I only wish Danny coulda been there to enjoy it… I know he was in spirit. Miss you brother. Megan made her uncle Danny proud!
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hats off to this guy! vocalist/guitar John Driscoll Hopkins
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Wow Bill! The lines on this one are superb.First time wearing my latest Borsalino. Thought it was more gray when I bought it but is more of a taupe. This one will be a keeper.
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Mike, Thanks! Great to see your gray Dunn & Co. Stiff Felt!This is one cool looking velour Steve. That wide ribbon and lines really do say 1930s!
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Bond, James Bond...went to see the latest 007 movie this morning. An English Bowler was worn as a nod to the early bond years.
Bond, James Bond...went to see the latest 007 movie this morning. An English Bowler was worn as a nod to the early bond years. Sadly, hats are no where to be found in the current films. Although Bond wore Locke & Co. hats, and wonderful 1960s stingy brim hats at that, I do not own any from this maker. I have a large number of British vintage hats, mostly 1950s homburgs, but the bowler seemed to be the most "British" for today. This Dunn & Co. gray stiff felt was probably made in the early 1960s, when Bowlers were making a comeback. The liner is a real looker on this one.
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Oh wow, just a look you. What a gent! Did you know that Avengers star, Patrick Macnee, created his character, John Steed's distinctive look himself? Apparently inspired by his father's flamboyant fashion. He may have chosen the bowler hat as a symbol of quintessential Britishness, but its origins are more workmanlike. It was made, as you pointed out, by the world's oldest milliner, Lock & Co, in 1850, as a form of protective headwear. Its original name was actually a Coke - named after the soldier and politician William Coke, who ordered the hat to protect the heads of gamekeepers who worked on his Norfolk farm.
According to Lock & Co, the prototype was made by Thomas and William Bowler, hat makers in the London district of Southwark, and brought to St James's Street to be tested by Coke himself. He did so by jumping on it and, because it withstood his weight, he bought it. The Coke became commonly known as a Bowler, after its makers. In America it became known as a Derby, after the horse race.
The bowler remained most popular from its conception to around World War Two, thereafter becoming something more usually sported by City workers in London's financial centre, before being reduced to something of a stereotypical curiosity. Fashion historian Amber Butchart says that while the bowler hat is a symbol of middle class British respectability, it was also, "something that manual labourers would wear for their Sunday best, becoming an aspirational item for them."
Macnee's influence lingers on. In the recent film Kingsman: The Secret Service, Colin Firth plays a charismatic, sharp-suited character who could be John Steed's nephew, complete with umbrella - but not a bowler, perhaps to avoid direct comparison.
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