Fedora-style Hat
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Just The Right Style, FEDORA, Raine Willitts Designs, 27402 |
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Just The Right Style resin figurine by Eillits. |
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The Hatter Co. Tweed Classic Cuban Style Fedora Fashion Cap Hat - (5 Colors Available)ReviewsBought Two hats for my husband, They look amazing. They were a little big but they dont look big on him so he still wears them. I received the hat two days after I ordered it and that was with standard shipping. The hat is a great quality for the price and fits great. Would 100% recommend this product. It seemed as if no sooner had I placed the order then it was at my front door. Quality is way beyond the cost. And it fits! O wow this hat is amazing, its just what i wanted and it arrived pretty fast with no complictions or delays. It fits me perfectly and goes really well with my face, and im not much of a hat person becuase i have a pretty narrow face and hats just make it look smaller but this one didnt! It fits and looks great and goes with like any outfit, i got ivory, so look no further, this is the hat u need Awesome quality and service. Although I am living overseas the item arrived in one week. I own approx 12 fashion hats and this is by far the best one that I have purchased. I will wear it with pride and let everyone know when I purchased it from. Outstanding quality and customer service. Everything I wanted in both size and quality. By far five stars in my books!!! Ted Average Rating:![]() |
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Classic Cotton Black Fedora HatReviewsUnfortunately the vendor decided to disregard their description of this and sent me a large sized hat that is too big for me. I ordered this hat at the last minute for my son who wanted to wear it to the prom with his tuxedo... I was skeptical that it might not be good quality and might be too small due to other comments... however.. I couldn't be more pleased! The quality is fantastic.. the color is rich black (the picture does not do the color justice).. the shape is prefect.. and most importantly, it is the right size for his head and we received it on time! I would definitely recommend this fedora! Very sturdy and well crafted despite the low price. It personally delights me, as this was the hat my father wore in the 1960s and 1970s. Stylish without looking as antiquated as the larger brim 1950s versions. The purchase went smoothly, the delivery time was quick. I'm quite satisfied. Item shown looks like a nice hat. Item received was... a nice hat! Fits great and feels comfortable, and I'm extremely glad I ordered from these merchants. Thanks! This was a great deal. I was expecting a very cheaply made product and it is actually quite nice. Average Rating:![]() |
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Classic Cotton Black Fedora Hat- Chic & sheen looking, this fedora has a sleek feel to it. Ideal for him or her, made from Cotton. Completely classy & a wardrobe must have! |
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New Plain Classic Fedora Fashion Cap Hat - BlackReviewsGreat hat! it looks exactly like it does in the picture. The material is strong and stiff, so it won't lose it's shape, it fits me perfectly, and also the shipping was pretty quick too (Standard Shipping)... Great product.. i recommend this to all of you who are thinking of buying it, you won't regret it! Got the hat today in the mail. It's a nice enough hat for the price and all, but the "one-size-fits-most" label was very misleading. As far as I know, I have a fairly average sized head, but this fedora is too small for me. It's my own fault for trying to be cheap, I suppose. I needed this for a Blues Brothers event and it was just fine! It packed well in my suitcase and easily sprung to life fairly well when I took it out. The "one-size" was a bit snug for me but I think I just have a big head :-(! I don't think I would wear it as a fashion accessory but it is a good price for what I needed it for which was a costume. The order processing and delivery was absolutely fast and I really appreciated that, Thanks! Nice hat! It looks better in person than the picture. It looks really nice and is stiff so the shape will not be lost. It will go great with my Ray-Ban Wayfarers! LOL! The company shipped it quickly! When I think of this type of hat, I never associate Michael Jackson but Cab Calloway, The Blues Brothers, etc. Average Rating:![]() |
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Indiana Jones HatReviewsI bought this hat for my 3-year-old grandson and he loves it. Because it only comes in one size, I had to pad it a little to make it fit him. Now, when he and I go out on our "adventures" we have matching "Indy" hats! Although it is only intended as a costume hat, it is of high enough quality for a child's play hat. Average Rating:![]() |
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Our Indiana Jones Hat for kids features the icon brown fedora hat. This is the officially licensed Indiana Jones Hat from Indiana Jones. |
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Michael Jackson Style Costume Fedora Hat - Size MediumReviewsClearly in the description of this hat, it is listed as a medium in size, however, when we received the hat it was a size large. This is misadvertisement, so when people purchase something, they expect to get exactly what you have advertised. No one wants to turn around and spend additional money returning an item because the retailer decides to send the wrong size. This was a xmas gift for my nephew. Average Rating:![]() |
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Great for 80's style Michael Jackson costumes...Comes brand new... |
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Sunday Afternoons Adventure HatReviewsVery happy with this product. Worked well on my fishing trips. stayed on provided great protection all day from the sun. We first purchased Sunday Afternoon Adventure hats about ten years ago. Initially, we purchased them for wearing while working outside. My husband is very fair and has had trouble with small skin cancers, so we wanted hats that had more than just neck protection. When the order arrived instantly knew that we had found the perfect hats. The brims are wide enough to shade the eyes well, but not so wide that they interfere with vision. The brims are reinforced so they do not flop down into your face. They also block the sensation of the sun pounding on the top of the head. They are well ventilated so the head does not start feeling like it's in a sauna. Since that original order, we have purchased additional hats to wear while traveling. These hats offer excellent sun and light rain protection, plus they are very durable. We have worn these hats in the tropical sun of Mexico and Hawaii, and on a trip to China. They do offer rain protection from warm tropical showers, but should not be confused with being an actual waterproof rain hat. If the angle of the sun is just right, it is possible to get a little bit of sunburn through the ventilation mesh, but not enough to have it represent a painful problem. We just ordered a replacement for my husband's original hat. He is outdoors all the time, as we have a rural property that needs to be mowed and otherwise maintained. This hat has been out in the sun for years, and has been washed countless times. Just recently a small rip appeared on the crown - the fabric has finally showing its age. If I could give this product 10 stars I would. It is an excellent buy. I bought this hat several years ago at the local fair. I also purchased one for each of my parents since they camp & my dad had skin cancer removed from the back of his neck. Now mine comes in especially handy living in the mountains where the sun glare is powerful. I wear daily while walking and to various events. I always get question where I got it. Average Rating:![]() |
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The Adventure Hat is designed with one specific purpose; complete 360 degree solar coverage. It has been awarded an unprecedented 13-point utility patent for sun protection. |
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Hatless Jack: The President, the Fedora, and the History of American StyleReviewsMore than a person should ever need to know but for ANYONE who loves hats, likes history and wants a good debunker of a book, this is it. I love this book. Use the information in it during hat tours here at the National Hat Museum in Portland, Oregon. Highly recommend this book. I'm not so sure I buy the author's main thesis that outlines that the hat died because of anarchists, bald men and communist groups that wanted to overthrow Imperialist culture. Bald men didn't even exist in the years before 1970 when nuclear waste was dumped in all communities, thus creating genetic mutations in the human gene pool. It'd probably be better to examine the economic cost of producing hats in the years from 1929-1945, where you will notice that all materials went up in costs. Alpaca hair, goat mutton and felt from camels shot up because of the depression. The economic collapse of the hat was inevitable. To place the blame on 60's "hippies" who had long hair and fleas is blatantly absurd. Bald Men Always Come Out on Top: 101 Ways to Use Your Head and Win With Skin Steinberg has written a thought provoking book about how men's hats went the way of the buffalo in America. He views the event largely through the lens of JFK and his aversion to hats, something that seems to be largely an urban legend magnified by newspaper writers eager to perpetuate Kennedy's youthful and maverick image. When it sticks to recounting the history of hats the book is fascinating, and reading about such forgotten things as the sometimes violently enforced "Straw Hat Day" and the hat check racket powerfully convey how prevalent and important hats used to be. More images would have helped here, since the most modern readers will have little clue as to to the difference between a boater and a stingy brim fedora. Less interesting is the recurring thread of the hat industry trying to get Kennedy to feature a hat more prominently in his wardrobe. It gets repetitive as the requests must have seemed to JFK. The backdrop of the history of the hat is better than theme of Kennedy as an icon rebuffing the hat industry as it tries to turn back the tide of bare headed men. Hatless Jack failed to convince me that Homburgs and fedoras were cast away because they were inconvenient symbols of soulless conformity, and the lack of hats nowadays is a symptom of windblown free spirit and more liberated times. The author makes more sense when he sites an increasingly indoor, motorized and informal society moving almost unconsciously away from a fashion than when he tries to show some sort of meaningful revolution against hats. It's a well written, interesting book and it only drags when it goes to the JFK/Hatters angle too many times. I'm glad I read it, and it has prompted me to consider aquiring a real hat, baseball caps be damned. I'm of two minds about this book. Neil Steinberg has produced a great history of the form and content of hat-wearing, and the decline of the behatted male in the United States. I learned a great deal about the industry, the importance of hats to the idea of the well-dressed man, and the many forces that came together to send the noble fedora and its cousins into their long decline. And also about John F. Kennedy. But while the author has done a fine job with the facts, I'm still not sure I buy all his interpretation of them. He strikes me as far too willing to buy into the cliché -- true in its most basic form, perhaps, but far too exaggerated in the popular mind -- of the dull, conformist, gray 1950s and the lively, individualist, color-saturated '60s. Perhaps he should, as the Randians would say, check his premises -- particularly his evident assumption that informality equals authenticity and self-expression. But if it is "conformist" for a man to wear a hat at a time when all men wear hats, why is it a sign of rebellious nonconformity to abandon hats when all men are abandoning them? Are we really any more individualist today, when forty-something men go to the mall dressed in the same long t-shirts, baggy shorts, and giant sneakers worn by their twelve year old sons? If you want to demonstrate individuality and self-expression through your dress today, gentlemen, the best way to do so is with suit, tie, and a well-maintained snap-brim. But, check out this book first to make sure you know when to tip the fedora, and to whom. I can't distinguish between Trilby's and Fedoras, I'm not sure I want to. They may even be the same thing. I was born in the same year that President Kennedy was assassinated, and I didn't know that there was a generally held belief that, because he didn't wear a hat at his inauguration, that he was responsible for the worldwide decline in hat wearing. Steinberg's book shows that this proposition is untrue on two counts - that hat wearing was declining throughout the Twentieth Century, and that, in fact, President Kennedy did wear a hat during his inauguration - in the procession up to it, tipping it to his father, and in the parade after it - but not in the memorable portions of it. Steinberg's book accumulates a significant amount of information that might be classified as social history or even incidental detail - the change in fashion for hats from top hats to less formal attire; the expense of owning a hat - hat check stalls were leased out by hotels and restaurants, and the leasees were accused of keeping both the fees and the tips; the vain, though valiant efforts, of hat companies to fight the tide of hatless-ness. He counters the view that hatless-ness was inevitable, pointing out that tie-wearing could be seen as equally obsolete and yet continued through the twentieth century. I think he's on thin ice with this argument, given the increasing popularity of `smart-casual' tieless-ness and `dress down Friday's'. The book also paints a picture of how Kennedy represented youth, vigour and change in 1960. His bareheadedness was part of this, so, apparently were the two-button suits which he favoured. His patrician-cool style was also apparent in his dislike of the usual hoopla of politics, he vowed never to raise both of his arms together, and politely refused to don almost all headgear - hats, Indian feathers- which he was offered on the campaign trail. There is a quite effective description of the impression left by Kennedy, especially his inauguration. Steinberg poses, but does not answer, the question as to why we remember him as hatless, when in fact he had a hat, and wore it for some of the occasion. Having read it, I am not sure why I did so, I have no interest in fashion or social history. However I would recommend it as a good, off-beat read. I think the book (I read the paperback version) would have benefited from pictures, which might have helped identify the various types of hat being referred to. One effect of this book however, is that I have started to watch black and white movies with renewed awareness of the hats, I recently watched a Jimmy Stewart movie, and was quite taken with the fact that he kept his hat on in the car. Average Rating:![]() |
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Boaters, derbies, fedorasuntil just a generation or two ago, a mans social status, if not his very masculinity, was defined by his hat. For centuries, men owned hats for all seasons and occasions... |












