The Ultimate Raiders Fedora?
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The Ultimate Raiders Fedora?
Has this been discussed before?
I know AB will reblock and "AB-ize" a HJ --- what if either AB licensed the HJ name from SAB - or would take a HJ lining and sew it into an AB?
Then you'd have the top quality felt/block/cut/shape and the HJ lining.
(Some will say "what's the point"...)
I know AB will reblock and "AB-ize" a HJ --- what if either AB licensed the HJ name from SAB - or would take a HJ lining and sew it into an AB?
Then you'd have the top quality felt/block/cut/shape and the HJ lining.
(Some will say "what's the point"...)
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That would be a insult to Mr. Delk.
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Anyone who wants to own a todd HJ . A Authentic gear, please let me know. I will be more than happy to sell mine.
No doubt about it, that is STILL one of the best looking HJ's I've ever seen!Aeris_Canon wrote:Yeah, you can never go back.
If you're thinking, "####, Aeris, get some sleep." I can't argue.
Jimmy did a fine job on the reblock, and of course your skills getting a Raiders bash out of a hat are the stuff of legends, AC.
Exactly. That's been my biggest complaint with the HJ ever since I found out what the heck an HJ was and what it cost to own one. Even the bargain you get from buying one through Todd still doesn't seem on par with the overall quality of the hat, from what I understand. Again, not having an HJ of my own, I wouldn't know for sure, but based on several firsthand accounts that I've heard over the years, they are indeed vastly overpriced considering the quality of the materials and construction. If these HJ's were priced in the same range as other rabbit felt hats like the Feds or Stetsons, I'd probably own 5 or 6 by now.AC with that awesome HJ wrote:In terms of money versus quality? The HJ is an overpriced hat for what's available from the fine vendors out there today.
-GCR
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To amplify on my reasoning a bit, this thread here got me thinking. All that re-work to make a HJ into a decent lid, and then still with the questions around the material.
Ah you say, well just buy an AB.
Then I saw this comment from Fedora in that thread:
Ah you say, well just buy an AB.
Then I saw this comment from Fedora in that thread:
Fedora wrote:The magic of the name is important to many of us, as that was indeed the brand Indy wore. Sure, it will never be the sort of quality hat that one would get from a pure beaver body, but if the hat is more durable and looks more accurate than the current HJs, many people will buy one.
If you get a good HJ, yes, but that's precisely the problem: HJ's are over-priced to begin with, but when you throw into the mix the fact that you aren't even assured that what you're getting will be able to handle what you throw at it (or even look the part for that matter) it's just not worth going for it, IMHO. :junior: -IJ
I'll take some photos along with my Optimo for another thread tomorrow. I ordered a HJ from Todd's and was so impressed that I ordered another one. I'm going to bash the first one and distress it to look like the Cairo hat on screen, dusty etc....
I'm pretty picky when it comes to screen accurate felt. Before I ordered the two HJ, my favorite Raiders hat was a vintage Mercury Indy but its way too expensive to distress.
The Raiders hat has to be floppy, that's why its appearance keeps changing on screen. So far, the HJ has satisfied my needs for that look, but others may disagree. I'm waiting on my AB so I will be able to compare those also. I don't own a Federation so I can't comment on the felt quality.
I'm pretty picky when it comes to screen accurate felt. Before I ordered the two HJ, my favorite Raiders hat was a vintage Mercury Indy but its way too expensive to distress.
The Raiders hat has to be floppy, that's why its appearance keeps changing on screen. So far, the HJ has satisfied my needs for that look, but others may disagree. I'm waiting on my AB so I will be able to compare those also. I don't own a Federation so I can't comment on the felt quality.
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AC, do you have any other pics of that hat?
I'd like to see some pics of that HJ, specifically pics where the camera is exactly 2.75 meters away from the hat, and raised to a height of 6 feet, 5 inches. The hat should be positioned exactly 6 feet from the ground, in normal daylight, between 11 AM and 1 PM on any day between June 1st and October 1st, with the hat facing due West, and the camera facing North by Northeast. Head angle while wearing the hat should be precisely 42.8 degrees.Aeris_Canon wrote:As in? What? The many ways it looks on? The instances where it looks worse than usual? In a state of being? Or in a pristine Raiders condition? What are you looking for in particular, Oak? I have a couple of different pics of it.
Have any pics like that?
Seriously though...I'd just like to see ANY old pics of the HJ of yours. That is definitely one of the "good ones".
Screen accurate felt, eh? I'm curious as to what constitutes SA felt. Texture? Composition? Floppiness? Thickness? The way it responds to poking and prodding? Some combination of those five?thePawn wrote:I'm pretty picky when it comes to screen accurate felt
-GCR
LOL...ummmm...what he saidGCR wrote: I'd like to see some pics of that HJ, specifically pics where the camera is exactly 2.75 meters away from the hat, and raised to a height of 6 feet, 5 inches. The hat should be positioned exactly 6 feet from the ground, in normal daylight, between 11 AM and 1 PM on any day between June 1st and October 1st, with the hat facing due West, and the camera facing North by Northeast. Head angle while wearing the hat should be precisely 42.8 degrees.
Have any pics like that?
-GCR
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wow, AC. Did I say anything to tick you off? I like to see how the hat looks from the side and maybe the back. I like to see how deep the top center crease is. The hat looks great no doupt about it. I would like to see it from different angles that all. Maybe from the same photo shoot.
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Back to the drawing board...........fishmeok wrote:ARRGH! you guys kill me. Every time I think I have my hat just right I see a pic of someone who has a better bash- then I have to spend half an hour re-shaping and fiddling with mine...
Cheers Mark
Much better...................
Sincerely,
Last edited by Dr.Seuss on Mon Sep 03, 2007 11:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
If you're talking about a vintage HJ, blocked on THE block, I'd aggree. Otherwise I can't, as all that the modern HJs have in common with what was used back then, is the name (and yes, I do have vintage HJs from the Raiders era).The best hat for a Raiders lid is a HJ. I think Fedora would agree as it has the best felt to make that floppy Cairo look.
There are MANY other hats out there, that will become just as floppy over time.
Regards,
Marc
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If you're talking about a vintage HJ, blocked on THE block, I'd aggree. Otherwise I can't, as all that the modern HJs have in common with what was used back then, is the name (and yes, I do have vintage HJs from the Raiders era).
There are MANY other hats out there, that will become just as floppy over time.
Regards,
Marc[/quote]
Thank you Marc.
There are MANY other hats out there, that will become just as floppy over time.
Regards,
Marc[/quote]
Thank you Marc.
Marc and I have always seen the HJs in exactly the same way. That should come as no surprise!!If you're talking about a vintage HJ, blocked on THE block, I'd aggree. Otherwise I can't, as all that the modern HJs have in common with what was used back then, is the name (and yes, I do have vintage HJs from the Raiders era).
Since we tend to be very anal here(I hate that word, and wish someone could tell me another word that "fit" so I would not have to use it.) let's get down to hard facts of analism.
The current HJ share with the original Raiders fedora only one thing. The name "Herbert Johnson" that is on the sweat. Now, what does it NOT share in common with the original hat. Take a peek.
1) Sweatband, leather and construction
2) Liner, material used
3) Hatter's crest
4) felt
5) same cut dimensional brim
6) ribbon and bow construction
7) block shape
And last but not least, the man who made the hat .
If you want a REAL Raiders HJ, you are gonna have to buy one from the era of Raiders. They are rare.
The current SAB is not the same company that the original hat came from. In the same way that an authenic Stetson, made by Stetson, has to be found on ebay, as Hatco is only using the Stetson name on their hats. And like the current HJ, this is the only tie that there is with the original.
But, to some, the name is very important, and I understand that. But take that newly blocked Raiders HJ, and wear it like Indy did, instead of as a dress up costume item. And then show us the pics. We would not be very impressed. Most folks want real hats. The HJ does not qualify. But it does make a dandy costume piece, perfect for pics in your front yard or Halloween. The choice of a hat really depends upon what you are gonna use it for. Just like any clothing item. For the backpackers here, that have been schooled in what to wear and what not to wear on a weeks backpacking trek into the wilderness, you guys know what I am talking about. You don't take a knife to a gunfight. Fedora
We mainly pay attention to the floppiness of the Raiders film hat. But, all hats in that film were not as floppy as some of the others. Costumers tend to take their hat supplies with them. The original HJ may not have been as floppy out of the box as we see it on the film. They aged the hat, by crushing it up, thereby breaking down the what stiffener was in the hat from the factory. In some scenes, I suspect they added stiffener back to the brim. They really do monkey with these hats during filming. The hat worn at the beginning of Raiders, the scenes filmed in Hawaii, and the last scenes to be filmed overall, you can tell they put a new HJ on Indy's head for outside of the temple scenes. Looks brand new, with little aging, if any. That hat looks stiffer than the SOC hat, and probably was. Regards, FedoraThere are MANY other hats out there, that will become just as floppy over time.
I personally can't blame anyone for wanting one, as I've thought a lot about getting one myself over the years...just because. I will admit, it was the high price tag and constant reports of taper and poor quality craftsmanship that scared me off everytime. Despite all that, I still have an urge to get one someday.Aeris_Canon wrote: As soon as the HJ is mentioned, the first thing everyone does is jump on it and proclaim that so and so brand is far better. Wait!
They are. No one's disputing the quality of an Hj in comparison, but let's say someone - for whatever reason - decided to buy an HJ just for the heck of it. Maybe they like that cheap, rabbit felt, maybe they just want the HJ name thing, or perhaps the other hats that were supposed to end it all just didn't live up to their hype; whatever. Maybe they know - and they should - that a brand new HJ from the factory is going to be tapered, machine made, wrong bow, etc., and still want one.
I honestly think a lot of the reason why you've had luck with your HJ might just be the size of the thing. You've got a hatsize south of 7 1/4, if I remember correctly, right? It's been speculated that HJ just mechanically stretches felt bodies out to make a larger hat size, rather than using a larger rawbody. That is also one of the possible reasons some HJ's shrink the way they do. Essentially (according to this theory) HJ would use let's say a 7 1/4 body to make a 7 3/8 hat, by stretching it out. Thus, that 7 3/8 hat will want to shrink back to that 7 1/4 size. But in your case, AC, your hat size being what it is, perhaps there isn't much, if any, stretching of the body, so the felt is more stable and doesn't feel the need to shrink? Just a theory (this would also explain why your brim seems very well proportioned compared to ydam's size 61 HJ). I honestly think hatsize is a MAJOR factor in getting a certain look out of a hat. Take the JPD, for example. As hard as I tried, I could only get a halfway decent Raiders look out of that hat. Yours, on the other hand, looked spectacular. I know you can bash a hat with the best of 'em, but I don't consider myself a slouch in that area, either. I just think Jimmy's blockshape was better suited to your hatsize and faceshape. But anyways, we're talking HJ's here...Aeris_Canon wrote:The only thing left was a reblock at that point. But what I am saying is, after getting it back, and looking a bit better, it has not shrunken, tapered, or dissolved the way I thought it was supposed to. How is this one HJ out of the whole lot the only hat to look right? Am I that lucky? Because they're supposed to be horrible.
And I know some of you are doing your best to get people to see the AB Deluxe.
Guilty...it's no secret Marc's hats are MY personal favorite, and the closest one can get to the Raiders hat, in my opinion.
But the determination in steering them toward hating their own hat is a bit excessive.
No clue what that means. I have no issue with people liking or hating their hats. My main issue is when folks tend to group the two AB's together into one category, despite the fact that they are completely different hats. I also take issue when folks play up a certain brand or item as being "the best" without consideration as to how it might be used or what needs to go into it to get it that way.
And more power to ya!You guys have put a lot of work into finding a good Raiders hat, have come up with several other brands, but have generally been unsuccessful with the HJs. And again, straight from the factory, they're going to need work. They are not the best hat for the money, or the best felt, but some might like, or want them, anyway.
"Well yeah, but for real adventure, you'd want to wear a - "
For real adventure you'd want to wear anything other than a fedora to begin with.* If we're stepping that far into the real world sensibility of hiking, camping, Nazi chasing and idol seeking. Whether you wear one for costume or backyard pics or for rock climbing, if it's hot enough, you'll still pour sweat into 'em (and if you're not, you're probably not being as adventurous as you think out there in the wilderness with that tougher felt) In some cases, that lighter, cheaper felt may be much more comfortable.
(* emphasis added)A fedora for adventure is a fictional hat.
Now you're really reaching. Sorry, but I doubt anyone around these parts is on their way out to battle Nazis or outrun boulders or get dragged behind a 5 ton truck. Granted, doing those things while wearing a fedora ISN'T very realistic, but wearing a fedora on the hiking trails, out camping, or doing any other sort of outdoor activity is certainly no stretch. I'm certianly surprised you feel that way. Anyways, some folks just want to wear a fedora because we like it. And we want one that looks like that cool hat we saw our favorite adventurer wear in Raiders. And we want to wear it the way it was meant to be worn. Sun, rain, snow. Out in the field and with a suit to the office. And we don't want to have to turn around and send it for a reblock every other week. That's why I gave up on rabbit felt, despite the fact that the Raiders hat was rabbit. It just didn't get the job done. And the barely imperceptable difference in texture between beaver and rabbit fur doesn't bother me. The fact that my ABD might not be quite as floppy as the Raiders hat was in some scenes does not bother me either. The felt is very pliable and can give me a lot of the same little "dings and dents" as the Raiders hat had in certain scenes.
Anyways, what is the difference between a fur felt fedora and a fur felt cowboy hat? Or a fur felt slouch hat? Or campaign hat? What is it that makes the fedora such a NON-adventure hat, in your opinion?A fedora for adventure is a fictional hat.
Anyways, AC, you make good points. Perhaps the HJ is villified a bit around these parts. It certainly does seem that with the right TLC, and a lot of work, it can be a viable option for a good Raiders after all. I certainly don't fault anyone for liking the HJ, but for those of us who wear our hats day in and day out, can you blame us for being just a bit leery?
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Now, I would believe all that had I not had one sent to me. (Yes, the one, lucky HJ out of the whole lot that started off just as cruddy, rated as horrible by the originial owner and tossed away.) The only thing left was a reblock at that point. But what I am saying is, after getting it back, and looking a bit better, it has not shrunken, tapered, or dissolved the way I thought it was supposed to. How is this one HJ out of the whole lot the only hat to look right? Am I that lucky? Because they're supposed to be horrible.
My understanding is it was a gift not tossed away.
How about those other pics?
Last edited by BendingOak on Mon Sep 03, 2007 4:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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yes it does. thanks for clearing this up. You nade it sound like it was going to tossed into the trash.
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I still like to see some other pics of it. I'll post some pics of the whip that John sent me.
Canon- I'd still like to see more pics of that HJ, too.
Anyways, about those pics...
-GCR
aeris_canon wrote:A fedora for adventure is a fictional hat.
Still curious about your answer on this one. A statement like that sort of conflicts with certain fundamental basics of this hobby. It almost sounds more like the sort of argument someone would make who is afraid to wear their hat on an adventure.GCR wrote:What is it that makes the fedora such a NON-adventure hat, in your opinion?
Anyways, about those pics...
-GCR
Last edited by GCR on Mon Sep 03, 2007 10:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
BS. If that were true, cowboys would never have been famous for wearing ten-gallon hats. True, those aren't technically fedoras, but for the intents and purposes of your argument, they might as well be (ie. people sweat just as much in a cowboy hat as in a fedora). If you think the purpose of wearing a fedora on an adventure is to keep cool, then you must have gotten heat stroke while we weren't looking.A fedora for adventure is a fictional hat.
Sweating never caused melanoma, but sun burn does, and that's what the fedora's supposed to protect you from when you're out there in all that heat. True, you could wear a straw hat, but from what I hear, those tear REALLY easily when they get wet.
If you're talking before the days of the cotton hats and the like that some rock climbers and adventurers wear these days, a Fedora (or cowboy hat) is really your only choice. :junior: -IJ
Yeah, if you get it from Todd or Magnoli, you get the softer felt that mimics the Raiders look better, at least the SOC hat. Softer felt tends to droop more.So which is it? The HJ felt today does or does not move around like the old vintage stuff? That opinion seems to change depending on the thread and which way the amount of interest is generated
Yeah, that's it. A reblocked HJ is so much better, i.e. more taper resistent than the stock HJs. So, a good route to go is to buy a soft HJ and have it reblocked. This really helps the felt out, as I don't think they are making these hats the old way. Now, they will still taper, like any hat, but you will get more miles out of it before you have to have it reblocked again.Now, I would believe all that had I not had one sent to me. (Yes, the one, lucky HJ out of the whole lot that started off just as cruddy, rated as horrible by the originial owner and tossed away.) The only thing left was a reblock at that point. But what I am saying is, after getting it back, and looking a bit better, it has not shrunken, tapered, or dissolved the way I thought it was supposed to. How is this one HJ out of the whole lot the only hat to look right? Am I that lucky? Because they're supposed to be horrible.
You went the right route there Aeris. That is the key to the HJ. Get someone who knows what they are doing to remake the hat. (which is what a reblock actually does)
A reblocked HJ pulls off the Raiders look very well. Sure, it is a low quality hat, but it will still last you quite awhile. But if money is an issue, there are better hats out there, if you don't mind wearing one without the HJ name. Regards, Fedora
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I'll be one to attest to this theory of the hat being "not really" for adventuring.
I hike, climb, cave, and "adventure" a TON! When hiking on single track or no track at all, on just basic, flat ground (or up hills) a fedora is not an issue at all,,other than a big gust of wind taking it (but that would mean you're not a hero, right? ) anyhooo,
as for real climbing, I can tell you the hat sometimes gets in the way,,mainly obstructing your view for handholds,footholds,or fitting into narrow passages, etc. And if a gust takes your hat and you try (instinctively) to grab for it,,you may be on your way down a long ways. Caving can sometimes prove a bit cumbersome as well, as you hit the hat on virtually every low,narrow wall or ceiling constantly. Not to mention the heat factor in warmer climates,,the sweat literally fills up my hat as the sweatband makes a good seal on my head, to where sweat pours down my face when I adjust or take off the hat.
Now, the hat's not as dangerous as the bag when climbing, but that's another story.
Bottom line, if referring to someone such as Indy, being dragged by trucks,flying planes and especially FIGHTING, etc, a fedora is COMPLETELY unrealistic! It would NEVER stay on. Just watch the outtakes of Ford riding the horse, it repeatedly flys off of his head. This is what would really happen. I've actually riden horses with my lid, but didn't do anything too strenuous to make it fly off, so it obviously can be done, (cowboys do it, although some have a neck string and let the hat lay back on their shoulders while briskly riding) but chances are, it'll fly off eventually.
Anyhooo, just thought I'd put in my 2 cents worth.
Me personally, I'll put up with the problamatic issues that "adventuring" with a fedora causes, just because I love wearing one while I'm doing it,and there a few benefits,,keeping the sun off of me being the biggest here in the desert, but the problems are there, I just deal with 'em. It's the price we pay for being an Indiana Jones fan (read "wannabee")
TR
I hike, climb, cave, and "adventure" a TON! When hiking on single track or no track at all, on just basic, flat ground (or up hills) a fedora is not an issue at all,,other than a big gust of wind taking it (but that would mean you're not a hero, right? ) anyhooo,
as for real climbing, I can tell you the hat sometimes gets in the way,,mainly obstructing your view for handholds,footholds,or fitting into narrow passages, etc. And if a gust takes your hat and you try (instinctively) to grab for it,,you may be on your way down a long ways. Caving can sometimes prove a bit cumbersome as well, as you hit the hat on virtually every low,narrow wall or ceiling constantly. Not to mention the heat factor in warmer climates,,the sweat literally fills up my hat as the sweatband makes a good seal on my head, to where sweat pours down my face when I adjust or take off the hat.
Now, the hat's not as dangerous as the bag when climbing, but that's another story.
Bottom line, if referring to someone such as Indy, being dragged by trucks,flying planes and especially FIGHTING, etc, a fedora is COMPLETELY unrealistic! It would NEVER stay on. Just watch the outtakes of Ford riding the horse, it repeatedly flys off of his head. This is what would really happen. I've actually riden horses with my lid, but didn't do anything too strenuous to make it fly off, so it obviously can be done, (cowboys do it, although some have a neck string and let the hat lay back on their shoulders while briskly riding) but chances are, it'll fly off eventually.
Anyhooo, just thought I'd put in my 2 cents worth.
Me personally, I'll put up with the problamatic issues that "adventuring" with a fedora causes, just because I love wearing one while I'm doing it,and there a few benefits,,keeping the sun off of me being the biggest here in the desert, but the problems are there, I just deal with 'em. It's the price we pay for being an Indiana Jones fan (read "wannabee")
TR
Yet, back once upon a time, everyone wore hats, and they even wore them while exploring and adventuring. That a hat can get in the way was well known back then.
I recall a passage from a book, written by Colin Fletcher, who hiked Death Valley, along with the Grand Canyon, and other places, solo. He ran into an old desert rat, and prospetor. A really old guy. When he noticed Colin did not have a hat on(he had lost it) he told Colin to hurry up and get another one. He told Colin that most of the dead folks they find in Death Valley, were almost always.........hatless. Those old timers definitely believed in wearing hats, no matter how hot it was outside. Felt hats. Regards, Fedora
I recall a passage from a book, written by Colin Fletcher, who hiked Death Valley, along with the Grand Canyon, and other places, solo. He ran into an old desert rat, and prospetor. A really old guy. When he noticed Colin did not have a hat on(he had lost it) he told Colin to hurry up and get another one. He told Colin that most of the dead folks they find in Death Valley, were almost always.........hatless. Those old timers definitely believed in wearing hats, no matter how hot it was outside. Felt hats. Regards, Fedora
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I had to share this beauty.
We have a saying around the firedepartment.........If you can't take the heat .......become a cop.
We have a saying around the firedepartment.........If you can't take the heat .......become a cop.
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I think a lot of the debate hinges on what sort of adventure you're involved in. I can come up with a whole list of fun and adventurous things that would be virtually impossible to do while wearing a fedora (or just about ANY hat for that matter). Skydiving, hang-gliding, scuba-diving or snorkelling, and like TR mentioned, rock climbing and spelunking. Yet there are plenty of others things to do that are fun and adventurous were wearing a hat isn't just possible, it's probably a GOOD IDEA. Hiking, backpacking, camping, fishing, hunting, kayaking, canoeing (sp?), horseback riding (as long as it's pulled down tight ), etc.
Wearing hats while doing fun and adventurous things isn't a new concept, so why is wearing a particular type of hat "fiction"? What makes a fedora such a poor choice for "adventure"? Is it the fact that the fedora as we know it was not intentionally designed specifically as an "adventure hat"? These days, most folks think of fedoras as "dress hats", something to wear if you're getting dressed up in a suit and you want to add some vintage class. But a fedora is not just a "dress hat". Back in the old days, men wore hats ALL THE TIME, not just while wearing suits (even though suit wearing was more common back then). But my point is, the fedora was designed to be WORN, not just worn on special occassions. Maybe it wasn't designed to be a rugged adventurers hat, but it WAS intended to serve a very real purpose day in and day out: to protect the wearer from the sun and elements (looking good was, of course, a bonus ). As fedoras fell out of fashion, and the methods of construction and materials changed (for the worse), fedoras became relegated more to the "dress hat" role, a role that didn't require a hat to stand up to rain and snow and sun like it used to, as it probably saw very limited use, mostly in good weather. Then WE came along...the gearheads who actually wanted to WEAR the gear. We're not reinventing the role of the fedora here, we're merely trying to bring things back to the way they were. In the old days, you COULD wear a hat in the elements, day in and day out, without it withering away. That's all most of us want these days. It doesn't need to be an "adventure hat", just a REAL hat.
Tone - I'm still waiting to hear your opinions as to why you think the fedora as an "adventure hat" is "fiction". Don't you have a section of your "adventure-realm.com" website advertising fedoras as "fedoras to be worn on adventures" or some such?
Still waiting on those HJ pics, too.
-GCR
Wearing hats while doing fun and adventurous things isn't a new concept, so why is wearing a particular type of hat "fiction"? What makes a fedora such a poor choice for "adventure"? Is it the fact that the fedora as we know it was not intentionally designed specifically as an "adventure hat"? These days, most folks think of fedoras as "dress hats", something to wear if you're getting dressed up in a suit and you want to add some vintage class. But a fedora is not just a "dress hat". Back in the old days, men wore hats ALL THE TIME, not just while wearing suits (even though suit wearing was more common back then). But my point is, the fedora was designed to be WORN, not just worn on special occassions. Maybe it wasn't designed to be a rugged adventurers hat, but it WAS intended to serve a very real purpose day in and day out: to protect the wearer from the sun and elements (looking good was, of course, a bonus ). As fedoras fell out of fashion, and the methods of construction and materials changed (for the worse), fedoras became relegated more to the "dress hat" role, a role that didn't require a hat to stand up to rain and snow and sun like it used to, as it probably saw very limited use, mostly in good weather. Then WE came along...the gearheads who actually wanted to WEAR the gear. We're not reinventing the role of the fedora here, we're merely trying to bring things back to the way they were. In the old days, you COULD wear a hat in the elements, day in and day out, without it withering away. That's all most of us want these days. It doesn't need to be an "adventure hat", just a REAL hat.
Tone - I'm still waiting to hear your opinions as to why you think the fedora as an "adventure hat" is "fiction". Don't you have a section of your "adventure-realm.com" website advertising fedoras as "fedoras to be worn on adventures" or some such?
Still waiting on those HJ pics, too.
-GCR