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Why men should wear hats - Stylish, mature and respectful: It’s about time
Maclean's ^ | May 29, 2013

Posted on 05/30/2013 5:58:17 PM PDT by rickmichaels

“I needed a drink, I needed a lot of life insurance, I needed a vacation, I needed a home in the country,” Raymond Chandler’s famously precise private eye Philip Marlowe observed in 1940’s Farewell, My Lovely. “What I had was a coat, a hat and a gun.”

The hat, a fedora most likely, was once as crucial to detective work as a sidearm and trench coat. And utterly masculine.

The same could be said about the business of hockey. Archival black-and-white shots of famous National Hockey League coaches such as the Toronto Maple Leafs’ Punch Imlach or Toe Blake of the Montreal Canadiens invariably show them wearing a hat at work behind the bench. And behind them, nearly every male in the crowd was similarly attired.

Throughout history and up until the 1950s, hats—fedoras, trilbys, homburgs, bowlers, top hats, tricornes—were considered an essential component of a man’s outfit. Only peasants and beggars went bare-headed. Hats were both a status symbol and a universally required fashion accessory. European tastes for beaver felt hats were even a significant factor in Canada’s early economic history. And there existed a lengthy set of rules covering when a man should doff his hat, when he should tip it and when he should leave it on. It was thus a mechanism for showing respect in public as well. But that was a long time ago.

The rise of youth culture in the 1960s quickly turned the hat into the headgear of out-of-touch old fogeys. Your grandfather wore a hat to work; enough said. And in a flash, the hat disappeared.

Men’s heads have not been entirely bare since then, of course. The baseball cap achieved an unfortunate ubiquity beginning in the 1980s. Many observers have dutifully lamented the ball cap’s lack of dignity, style and etiquette. As Canadian essayist Mark Kingwell has argued, there are only three situations in which a grown man should be seen wearing a ball cap: jogging in the rain, playing baseball and fishing. Anything else ought to be recognized as a desperate attempt by middle-aged men to look “young, sporty and athletic . . . a project doomed to failure,” he writes.

There have been brief revivals of proper men’s hats over the years. Hipsters have long used the hat as a sign of their own unconventionality. And recently the cable television show Mad Men, which glorifies the sartorial look and social insouciance of the advertising world of the early 1960s, spurred a revival of grey suits, thin ties and fedoras. But these efforts are deliberately backwards looking or ironically retro. If the man’s hat is to make a full-fledged comeback, it must be as a symbol of youth rather than nostalgia.

Could it already be happening?

This week saw the unveiling of uniforms for Air Canada Rouge, a low-cost leisure airline slated to begin flying this July. In keeping with the new airline’s youthful target market, flight attendants will eschew the business attire familiar to mainline airline staff in favour of red sweaters, ties, scarves and low-rise grey pants. The most noteworthy accessory, however, is a jaunty chapeau.

Both male and female attendants will be wearing a grey pinstriped snap brim trilby when Air Canada Rouge takes off this summer. “It’s a man’s hat, but it looks great on any woman,” reports Milene Vaknin, who designed the uniforms. “It’s like Glee in the sky!” reported one blogger. Is it the beginning of a trend?

Obviously one carefully managed corporate effort to make itself appear hip with the younger crowd doesn’t constitute a full-fledged fashion reversal. Yet alongside Air Canada’s unisex trilby, it’s worthy noting popular singers such as Justin Timberlake, Usher and Neo have also taken to wearing hats lately, upping the cool factor considerably. No one who might consider themselves to be a fan of Justin Timberlake will remember their father or grandfather going to work in a hat. So perhaps the connection between the hat and dreary conservatism has been severed; in its place a new trendy, youthful and urban image may be in the works.

A return of the man’s hat—if we are indeed witnessing the early days of its revival— ought to be welcomed. It makes practical sense for a man to cover his head in many situations. And yet the popularity of the ball cap has infantilized men’s fashion, in no small part because it never comes off. A proper man’s hat, on the other hand, is stylish, mature and respectful. It is worn outdoors, at sporting events and in elevators, tipped to recognize acquaintances and removed at meal times. A hat elevates polite society and adds grace to the streetscape. If women start wearing them too, so much the better.

Hats off to more hats.

New Air Canada Rouge uniforms:



TOPICS: Society; Travel
KEYWORDS: fashion; hats; manhood
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To: Billthedrill
davy crocket photo: The REAL Davy Crocket davycrocket.jpg ed norton photo: Ed Norton ed-norton.jpg commando cody photo: Commado cody Commando_Cody.jpg
61 posted on 05/30/2013 6:57:34 PM PDT by Morgana (Always a bit of truth in dark humor.)
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To: Verginius Rufus

“That’s just what I was told—I’m not saying it was right.”

LOL, sometimes I think parents make stuff up. My dad told us that if we swallowed our gum that it would go down and wrap around our heart. Swallow enough and your heart would quit.


62 posted on 05/30/2013 6:58:17 PM PDT by Lurkina.n.Learnin (President Obma; The Slumlord of the Rentseekers)
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To: rickmichaels

My 15yo son has a gray fedora, reminiscent of the old days. It’s the type of hat I remember my grandfather wearing. When my son wears it, he knows to remove it whenever he enters a church or a classroom. I haven’t noticed other teenage boys wearing that kind of hat, though.


63 posted on 05/30/2013 7:01:43 PM PDT by Tired of Taxes
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To: rickmichaels

So many rules to learn.


64 posted on 05/30/2013 7:02:59 PM PDT by Oratam
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To: Tired of Taxes
I've got a teen nephew that has a fedora. At the last funeral we were at, he asked where I got the tweed beret.

Fashions go in cycles.

I'm still waiting to be able to wear my powder blue polyester suit with the wide lapels and the platform shoes again, though. I'll need new goldfish....

/johnny

65 posted on 05/30/2013 7:08:04 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (Gone Galt)
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To: Tired of Taxes

66 posted on 05/30/2013 7:23:42 PM PDT by DManA
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To: JRandomFreeper

Back in the 70s my mother coerced my father into buying a powder blue leisure suit (polyester I’m sure).

His boss saw him in it once and told him, My God Andy. What are we paying you? Obviously not enough.

Needless to say that was the last time he ever wore it.


67 posted on 05/30/2013 7:28:00 PM PDT by DManA
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To: rickmichaels

JFK killed the hat.


68 posted on 05/30/2013 7:29:03 PM PDT by Born to Conserve
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To: dalereed
You sorry ass easterners keep your damn hats there and out of California!!! Only North East creaps and gangsters wear hats!

So what do the Californian creeps and gangters wear?
69 posted on 05/30/2013 7:31:31 PM PDT by ThomasSawyer (Democratic Underground: Proof that anyone can figure out how to use a computer.)
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To: DManA
A year or so later, my older sister taught me how to do laundry: "Whites in hot, colors in cold, polyester in the trash".

/johnny

70 posted on 05/30/2013 7:31:57 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (Gone Galt)
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To: DManA

LOL. My son looks like the pinnacle of cool with his fedora (in my eyes, anyway). ;-)


71 posted on 05/30/2013 7:38:07 PM PDT by Tired of Taxes
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To: ThomasSawyer
So what do the Californian creeps and gangters wear?

Heh, they don't like to wear hats - it would cover up all their tattoos.
72 posted on 05/30/2013 7:45:07 PM PDT by fr_freak
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To: JRandomFreeper

I had an Indiana Jones-type hat in the ‘80’s... It was my favorite hat; I don’t know what happened to it.

I’m a woman who wore hats and caps when I was a teenager. Then I stopped when I was an adult, until two years ago when I lost my hair to chemo, and I found a 1970-ish type of denim cap that covered my whole head. Out in public, so many people would stop to compliment me on that cap... lol.


73 posted on 05/30/2013 7:50:53 PM PDT by Tired of Taxes
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To: JRandomFreeper

Ditto


74 posted on 05/30/2013 7:55:41 PM PDT by reed13k (For evil to triumph it is only necessary for good men to do nothing.)
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To: rickmichaels

I like a straw snap brim pork pie ala Sam Snead, about as good as it gets. It’s lightweight, covers the ears and very retro.


75 posted on 05/30/2013 7:56:46 PM PDT by donaldo
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To: Morgana; Revolting cat!; a fool in paradise

"Stylish, mature and respectful"

76 posted on 05/30/2013 7:58:28 PM PDT by Slings and Arrows (You can't have IngSoc without an Emmanuel Goldstein)
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To: rickmichaels
Works for me.


77 posted on 05/30/2013 8:06:39 PM PDT by Mr Rogers (Liberals are like locusts...)
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To: rickmichaels
I have always hated hats. Got into no end of grief in the Marines for failing to cover outside. Luckily, while in the Air Wing, no cover was required on the flight line.

Now, with almost no hair left up on top, I do try and cover up, but still hate the feel of a headband on my forehead. Head overheats as well, instant cooling when I take the damn thing off.

78 posted on 05/30/2013 8:09:01 PM PDT by doorgunner69
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To: wally_bert

My daddy used to always wear a hat; good ones. Later in life, I started giving him those little lightweight hats (don’t know what they’re called); little informal hats. He wore them; and I think he was relieved to wear cooler, less tight fitting ones that still covered his bald head.


79 posted on 05/30/2013 8:16:26 PM PDT by Twinkie (John 3:16)
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To: rickmichaels
Why men should wear hats - Stylish, mature and respectful: It’s about time


80 posted on 05/30/2013 8:17:44 PM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the blind obedience of fools - Solon, Lawmaker of Athens)
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