![Image](http://jeremayakovka.typepad.com/jeremayakovka/images/winston_churchill_victory_1.jpg)
![Happy :)](./images/smilies/IndySmile.gif)
![Image](http://www.mybrightonandhove.org.uk/images/uploaded/scaled/Churchill_at_the_Royal_Pavilion_3rd_Oct_1947_s.jpg)
![Image](http://www.independent.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00011/tailoring221107p8_11040t.jpg)
Moderators: Indiana Jeff, Dalexs
His whole quote was:3thoubucks wrote: He never got back to my question about whether hats ever got telescope crowns, but I think that was implied- "We always called that a pork pie crown as opposed to the puddled crown...."
I don't think it was implied at all. He only responded to the picture of the pork pie you posted, but he never said anything other to imply that the Raiders hat ever had a pork pie bash, or was even a telescope crown. You said it yourself:We always called that a pork pie crown as opposed to the 'puddled crown' which was a less severe version .
I think you're putting words in his mouth a bit.He never got back to my question about whether hats ever got telescope crowns...
It has too much reverse taper in back, but that could be because the felt is stiffer than the Raiders hat.
To "porkpie" a hat means to shape the crown like a porkpie. That refers to the style of hat, which has a short stovepipe style crease called a telescope because of the way the top of the crown is folded in on itself. Think of Gene Hackman as Popeye Doyle in "The French Connection"-- he wore a porkpie.gabrielle wrote:Ok I give up! What does it mean to porkpie a hat? And how does this make it look like telescopic lines?
Sorry man, but I still see that bulging instead of a true backtilt. If you start a line at the bottom of the ribbon, and extend it upwards, this becomes more obvious. The back of the hat moves in at the top half of the ribbon, and then moves out above it. A true back tilt from a straight back, would start at the bottom of the ribbon and slant rearward all the way up the hat. The pic you posted does not show this. But, only my opinion.Looks like I don't have too much backtilt!
I agree. With little crease in the top, this shows what the Raiders fedora looked like, almost uncreased on the top. Here is is again.Besides, if you wanna know what the block shape looked like, the scene with the Nazi in Raiders wearing the open crown gray Poet should be enough. It had little dome. Hats with lots of dome like the original Fed look silly worn open crowned.
I don't think there's any reason to believe the Raiders hat was blocked on anything other than a fedora block.
Yep, we ran into the same thing with the front and back being stovepiped. You just get this impression(the stove pipe look) when you watch not only the film, but the behind the scenes videos of the hat on Ford and the stuntman. Of course, we see hats that don't look quite that way as well....but I still say those HJs tapered from the heat, etc.Fedora, you, Marc and I got sensitive about 360 stovepipes a couple years back. ? We've all gone there instinctively. I stopped because, when the side view looked good, the front view was too reverse tapered. I guess that's why you and Marc abondoned it also. The Wildcard we never considered is a very tight fit, which means a smaller hat, which means a smaller crown circumfrence. I don't think the Cairo Grey could give you backtilt, like the Raiders hat, and the Raiders hat needs to have a little fuller block
Exactly. It's a tight fit. The videos of Ford putting the hat on show that his fit is very tight. But it's not making his hat look tapered.Marcus Brody wrote:That gray appears to have too much front back taper, but mostly due to how he's wearing it. He's got that thing pulled down really far down and it's definitely got some brim distortion as a result of turn. It shouldn't normally have that much taper.
Yeah, put a nice tight Raiders front pinch and a Raiders top bash in that Grey hat, the front view would be tapered too. ...(Friends, get a Winston 360 hat here- viewtopic.php?t=33266Marcus Brody wrote: He also doesn't have a center crease.