old movies and Fedoras etc
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old movies and Fedoras etc
I watched a Thin man movie yesterday, and MOST of the good guys wore hats with a Indy pinch, and top bash. Then they wore the hat tilted and the SIDE brim on the high side went down and the low side up, along with the back up and the front of course down. they all looked great, even the supposed bad guys wearing white versions of the lids.
and there was NO casual Friday always dressed up rather refreshing.
if wide ties change to narrow ties and back again, why can't HATS make a comeback?
and there was NO casual Friday always dressed up rather refreshing.
if wide ties change to narrow ties and back again, why can't HATS make a comeback?
I'm still getting folks used to seeing someone in the office with a suit (usually sans tie, but not always), before I start donning a Fedora.
Just gonna wait til the rainy weather starts then ease the hats in place.
Just think, if you start wearing a Fedora before the fourth IJ movie
comes out, you can say
"I was wearing a hat WAY before the film was out!"
Just gonna wait til the rainy weather starts then ease the hats in place.
Just think, if you start wearing a Fedora before the fourth IJ movie
comes out, you can say
"I was wearing a hat WAY before the film was out!"
- Canada Jones
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I have a poster in my office of Grand Central Station from 1930. I love it. I am sure you have seen it its the one with the sun coming through the windows - http://www.bgcrisis.com/artwork/GrandCentral.jpg
but I love it because everyone is wearing a fedora. When did this trend end?
Canada
but I love it because everyone is wearing a fedora. When did this trend end?
Canada
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- Canada Jones
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- Canada Jones
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- Canada Jones
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JFK refused to wear a hat when he was inaugurated and that has been said to be the downfall of mens hats [well except baseball caps, a VERY poor substitute] it may have been coming anyway but that surely put the bullet in it.Canada Jones wrote:I have a poster in my office of Grand Central Station from 1930. I love it. I am sure you have seen it its the one with the sun coming through the windows - http://www.bgcrisis.com/artwork/GrandCentral.jpg
but I love it because everyone is wearing a fedora. When did this trend end?
Canada
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Dostacos:Dostacos wrote:JFK refused to wear a hat when he was inaugurated and that has been said to be the downfall of mens hats [well except baseball caps, a VERY poor substitute] it may have been coming anyway but that surely put the bullet in it.Canada Jones wrote:I have a poster in my office of Grand Central Station from 1930. I love it. I am sure you have seen it its the one with the sun coming through the windows - http://www.bgcrisis.com/artwork/GrandCentral.jpg
but I love it because everyone is wearing a fedora. When did this trend end?
Canada
I would love to read about this. Is this somethign you heard or read somewhere. Anyone know any books on the history of the hat?
Canada
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Dostacos:
I would love to read about this. Is this somethign you heard or read somewhere. Anyone know any books on the history of the hat?
Canada
We've had a few threads about the topic. There's a book called "Hatless Jack" that talks about it. If you run a search in the forums on ; "Book "Hatless Jack" - Required Reading" you'll get a better understanding of the history. Hope that helps Canada.
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That is very helpful Erin Jones. I am going to order that book. And thanksErin Jones wrote:Dostacos:
I would love to read about this. Is this somethign you heard or read somewhere. Anyone know any books on the history of the hat?
Canada
We've had a few threads about the topic. There's a book called "Hatless Jack" that talks about it. If you run a search in the forums on ; "Book "Hatless Jack" - Required Reading" you'll get a better understanding of the history. Hope that helps Canada.
Canada
I have no idea where I heard/read it. I am sure it was a passing comment on one of the "Camelot" stories regarding his time in office. The same time he was not wearing hats, the first lady set fashion by WEARING hats.Canada Jones wrote:Dostacos:Dostacos wrote:JFK refused to wear a hat when he was inaugurated and that has been said to be the downfall of mens hats [well except baseball caps, a VERY poor substitute] it may have been coming anyway but that surely put the bullet in it.Canada Jones wrote:I have a poster in my office of Grand Central Station from 1930. I love it. I am sure you have seen it its the one with the sun coming through the windows - http://www.bgcrisis.com/artwork/GrandCentral.jpg
but I love it because everyone is wearing a fedora. When did this trend end?
Canada
I would love to read about this. Is this somethign you heard or read somewhere. Anyone know any books on the history of the hat?
Canada
was he the leader of the fashion statement OR just the forefront I could not say. We do know that Ike wore hats, and Kennedy did not [I am sure Nixon stopped wearing one as he ran against him for president because of his advisers' advice]
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My guess is that nobody would want to wear one. The poor fool, anything he does seems to turn out badly.Canada Jones wrote:Funny to think that one person could so powerfully influence a fashion trend that had been in place for so many years. I wonder what would happen if George Bush started wearing hats...
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I was inspired to write this rant because of this thread and a recient death of a pastor this weekend, who had a profound effect on my life. I'm not finished yet...
I've been wearing fedora's off and on since 1982 - 25 years! (I just turned 38...) and I became addicted to Vintage Culture when I saw Raiders Of The Lost Ark, The Big Sleep, Casablanca and The Maltese Falcon and a few other Classics in a relatively short period of time. Since then I've been trying to recapture that Retro-Vibe I had, which is a sense of euphoria you get when you're immersed in all things of that period. You can also call it "Vintage Nervina."
I've had the Retro-Vibe at several different occasions, only to lose it and get it back again. Used to be that if I bought a new fedora, I would have the Retro-Vibe for a long time, almost months. Now I have to find other sources like Vintage Movies, Authentic Vintage Clothes.
I've started to collect and request music from talented artists like Janet Klein to review for our music page, music made by people who "get it" and why being retro can be so cool, like belonging to a fraternity that few people know about but would want to join if they knew more about it.
On the one hand, I would like to see fedoras and retro-wear become main-stream again and have Vintage-style items become easily excessible (which they are now, thanks to The Internet, and it's everywhere if you know how to look.) Yet on the other hand, I don't want it to become "In" just so that it would become "out" as quickly as the seasons change. I've seen Vintage Revival come and go... I'm sometime releaved when it goes just so that I can go back to feeling as if this style choice is mine and nobody assumes I'm doing it to be like everyone else.
Indiana Jones and IndyGear (before there was ever even a site called IndyGear or the forum...) really inspired me to get into the hearts and minds of The Greatest Generation, the legion of heroes who were once ordanary men who did something extraordary to save the world. There are countless stories that need to be told, ours and theres. Keeping it Retro is just a part of it.
Keep wearing your fedoras, the Indy Screen Accurate ones, The Maltese Falcon/Casablanca ones, The Nick Charles/Thin Man ones... all of them. Keep Vintage alive.
I've been wearing fedora's off and on since 1982 - 25 years! (I just turned 38...) and I became addicted to Vintage Culture when I saw Raiders Of The Lost Ark, The Big Sleep, Casablanca and The Maltese Falcon and a few other Classics in a relatively short period of time. Since then I've been trying to recapture that Retro-Vibe I had, which is a sense of euphoria you get when you're immersed in all things of that period. You can also call it "Vintage Nervina."
I've had the Retro-Vibe at several different occasions, only to lose it and get it back again. Used to be that if I bought a new fedora, I would have the Retro-Vibe for a long time, almost months. Now I have to find other sources like Vintage Movies, Authentic Vintage Clothes.
I've started to collect and request music from talented artists like Janet Klein to review for our music page, music made by people who "get it" and why being retro can be so cool, like belonging to a fraternity that few people know about but would want to join if they knew more about it.
On the one hand, I would like to see fedoras and retro-wear become main-stream again and have Vintage-style items become easily excessible (which they are now, thanks to The Internet, and it's everywhere if you know how to look.) Yet on the other hand, I don't want it to become "In" just so that it would become "out" as quickly as the seasons change. I've seen Vintage Revival come and go... I'm sometime releaved when it goes just so that I can go back to feeling as if this style choice is mine and nobody assumes I'm doing it to be like everyone else.
Indiana Jones and IndyGear (before there was ever even a site called IndyGear or the forum...) really inspired me to get into the hearts and minds of The Greatest Generation, the legion of heroes who were once ordanary men who did something extraordary to save the world. There are countless stories that need to be told, ours and theres. Keeping it Retro is just a part of it.
Keep wearing your fedoras, the Indy Screen Accurate ones, The Maltese Falcon/Casablanca ones, The Nick Charles/Thin Man ones... all of them. Keep Vintage alive.
can you wear a Nick Charles style when you are built like Sidney Greenstreet?Renderking Fisk wrote:I was inspired to write this rant because of this thread and a recient death of a pastor this weekend, who had a profound effect on my life. I'm not finished yet...
I've been wearing fedora's off and on since 1982 - 25 years! (I just turned 38...) and I became addicted to Vintage Culture when I saw Raiders Of The Lost Ark, The Big Sleep, Casablanca and The Maltese Falcon and a few other Classics in a relatively short period of time. Since then I've been trying to recapture that Retro-Vibe I had, which is a sense of euphoria you get when you're immersed in all things of that period. You can also call it "Vintage Nervina."
I've had the Retro-Vibe at several different occasions, only to lose it and get it back again. Used to be that if I bought a new fedora, I would have the Retro-Vibe for a long time, almost months. Now I have to find other sources like Vintage Movies, Authentic Vintage Clothes.
I've started to collect and request music from talented artists like Janet Klein to review for our music page, music made by people who "get it" and why being retro can be so cool, like belonging to a fraternity that few people know about but would want to join if they knew more about it.
On the one hand, I would like to see fedoras and retro-wear become main-stream again and have Vintage-style items become easily excessible (which they are now, thanks to The Internet, and it's everywhere if you know how to look.) Yet on the other hand, I don't want it to become "In" just so that it would become "out" as quickly as the seasons change. I've seen Vintage Revival come and go... I'm sometime releaved when it goes just so that I can go back to feeling as if this style choice is mine and nobody assumes I'm doing it to be like everyone else.
Indiana Jones and IndyGear (before there was ever even a site called IndyGear or the forum...) really inspired me to get into the hearts and minds of The Greatest Generation, the legion of heroes who were once ordanary men who did something extraordary to save the world. There are countless stories that need to be told, ours and theres. Keeping it Retro is just a part of it.
Keep wearing your fedoras, the Indy Screen Accurate ones, The Maltese Falcon/Casablanca ones, The Nick Charles/Thin Man ones... all of them. Keep Vintage alive.
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and a Gary Oldman face
Well, at least at one time you could get Winona Ryder while she was still hot and free of a shop lifting record.
Last edited by Tennessee Smith on Sun Aug 05, 2007 10:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Renderking Fisk
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The majority of the hats made by the U.S. hat industry were rabbit. The fur was imported from France, Belgium, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and other Central European countries. By 1941 only England and Russia were supplying us with rabbit fur.Castor Dioscuri wrote:Speaking of old movies, what material do you think was the material of choice when it came to fedoras back in the Golden Age of Hollywood? I'm guessing that it wouldn't be beaver felt, since those fedoras on the screen certainly look very, very soft.
Brad
Yep I always wear a hat. Not so much in summer though because all my hats are black and my leather cowboy is well... leather. Now when it's hot in Florida, IT'S HOT IN FLORIDA! I absolutely can't wear hats in the summer or I would probably die .binkmeisterRick wrote:Sounds like we got another hat wearer here, folks!Nameless wrote:Well I don't have a Indy fedora YET, I always wear my black fur felt fedora. I wear it with a suits or just in casual clothes and it fits with everything.
-Josh
-Josh
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You might want to check the classifieds section if you wear a 7 1/4.
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