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What Size is this Hat?

TPD166

One Too Many
Messages
1,295
Location
Lone Star State
I couldn't get you link to open directly, but I think this is the hat:

https://www.etsy.com/listing/228880...ll&ga_view_type=gallery&ga_search_query=CHAMP FEDORA&ref=sr_gallery_9

If it is, based on those crazy measurements, I have no idea - possibly a 22" circumference? I would contact them and ask for the specific measurements you need to determine size - and then be cautious of the their numbers. I've purchased several hats based on measurements only the find they were way off. I'd also ask about size tags and/or ask them to look for tags or markings inside the sweatband (and maybe for some photos of the interior and lining).
 

WesternHatWearer

A-List Customer
Messages
366
Location
Georgia
Hat Size.jpg

I would guess the hat is between a 7 and 7(1/8).
 

tropicalbob

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,954
Location
miami, fl
Doesn't that drive you nuts? You'd think that someone who did this regularly would maybe figure out how to size a hat.
 

rogerstg

A-List Customer
Messages
325
Location
Rhode Island
I'd contact the seller and ask them to show photos of the backside of the sweatband along with any writing or tags. Sometimes there will be something like a handwritten 3/8, meaning 7 3/8; 1/4 for 7 1/4, etc.
 

TheDane

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,670
Location
Copenhagen, Denmark
Well, it's obviously the first time the shop-owner sells a gent's hat, so I would wonder more, if he/she could accurately measure a hat :)

Contact the seller and ask for the length and the width of the crown-opening. Add those two numbers and divide by two. Then you usually get an estimate, closer to the actual size of the hat.

(Length + Width) / 2 ~ Hat size (US)
 

TPD166

One Too Many
Messages
1,295
Location
Lone Star State
I just received a hat in the mail that I bought a few days ago. The seller had posted photos of her measuring the inside circumference with a tape measure and she listed it as a 7-1/4 based on her measurements. I could see that tape was not tight and rolled the dice that the hat would be larger and it was - it is either a 7-3/8 or a snug 7-1/2. Usually I don't trust the seller's measurements unless I know they are a "hat person" because they are usually wrong - and in this case, even with the photos, her numbers were not correct. But I think this is the first time it worked to my advantage.
 

TheDane

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,670
Location
Copenhagen, Denmark
TPD166: I recently purchased a Knox 20, that the seller claimed to be 22" in circumference - which translates into somewhere between size 7 and 7-1/8 (US).

I asked her to measure the length and width, and she returned: "8 x 6-1/2" - which translates into a size 7-1/4 (US), or just my size.

When I recieved the hat, it turned out to be very close to a perfect fit for me. The manufacturing label inside, claimed the hat to be a 7-1/2, though!

The moral could be something like: "When buying vintage hats, don't blindly trust circumference-measurements - and don't trust manufacturing labels, either" ;)

When Alan first showed the rule-of-thumb, mentioned above, I didn't buy it. I found it way too "non-mathematical" ... but it has long ago proven it's reliability [huh]
 

TPD166

One Too Many
Messages
1,295
Location
Lone Star State
Amen!

TPD166: I recently purchased a Knox 20, that the seller claimed to be 22" in circumference - which translates into somewhere between size 7 and 7-1/8 (US).

I asked her to measure the length and width, and she returned: "8 x 6-1/2" - which translates into a size 7-1/4 (US), or just my size.

When I recieved the hat, it turned out to be very close to a perfect fit for me. The manufacturing label inside, claimed the hat to be a 7-1/2, though!

The moral could be something like: "When buying vintage hats, don't blindly trust circumference-measurements - and don't trust manufacturing labels, either" ;)

When Alan first showed the rule-of-thumb, mentioned above, I didn't buy it. I found it way too "non-mathematical" ... but it has long ago proven it's reliability [huh]
 

RJR

Messages
10,620
Location
Iowa
I've had good luck asking a potential seller to run a strip of masking tape around the inside of the sweat,mark where it crosses,remove it and measure the tape from the starting end to the crossover mark.
 

totallyfrozen

One of the Regulars
Messages
250
Location
Houston, Texas, United States
Just want to +1 the comments about not trusting manufacture sizing. We all know the stereotypes about Asian people generally being smaller than US/European people. I recently bought a hat made in Vietnam that is size "large". Well, their large is our medium. The hat is supposed to fit up to 7-3/8. It's a bit smaller than it should be on a 7-1/4 head. Take those sizing labels with a grain of salt.


Sent from my iPhone 5c using Tapatalk
 

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