Post by Lerkurlian Tamer on Oct 10, 2007 1:38:29 GMT -5
* Akubra Australian hat with similarities to fedoras and cowboy hats
* Boater: Straw hat
* Bowler: The bowler hat is a hard felt hat with a rounded crown created for Thomas Coke, 2nd Earl of Leicester, in 1850. In the United States, this hat is also known as a derby hat.
* Cowboy: Though thought of as a consistent style, cowboy hats are simply highly rugged and utilitarian hats. Made of felt or straw, they feature large brims (as wide as four inches or more) to protect against rain and sun and some are even designed to hold water in the crown. Common styles include a safari style brim (with the brim turned down in the front and back) or a brim sharply curved up on either side. The last brim style has the effect of lowering the front of the brim to better protect the wearers eyes from the sun.
* Fedora: Wider brimmed version of the Trilby
* Homburg: German designed hat
* Mortarboard: Educational hat worn usually to graduation
* Porkpie: Circular shaped blocked inner tip
* Panama: Straw hat made in Ecuador
* Slouch: Generic term covering covering wide brimmed feltcrown hat, pupoula with militay and ranchers hats
* Tea Hat: A wide brim hat worn by women and typically decorated with ribbons and/or fake flowers.
* Top hat: A top hat is a kind of tall, flat-crowned, broad-brimmed hat worn by men throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, now usually worn only with morning dress or evening dress.
* Trilby Hat
* Ushanka: Russian fur hat with fold down ear flaps
Info taken from Wikipedia.
* Boater: Straw hat
* Bowler: The bowler hat is a hard felt hat with a rounded crown created for Thomas Coke, 2nd Earl of Leicester, in 1850. In the United States, this hat is also known as a derby hat.
* Cowboy: Though thought of as a consistent style, cowboy hats are simply highly rugged and utilitarian hats. Made of felt or straw, they feature large brims (as wide as four inches or more) to protect against rain and sun and some are even designed to hold water in the crown. Common styles include a safari style brim (with the brim turned down in the front and back) or a brim sharply curved up on either side. The last brim style has the effect of lowering the front of the brim to better protect the wearers eyes from the sun.
* Fedora: Wider brimmed version of the Trilby
* Homburg: German designed hat
* Mortarboard: Educational hat worn usually to graduation
* Porkpie: Circular shaped blocked inner tip
* Panama: Straw hat made in Ecuador
* Slouch: Generic term covering covering wide brimmed feltcrown hat, pupoula with militay and ranchers hats
* Tea Hat: A wide brim hat worn by women and typically decorated with ribbons and/or fake flowers.
* Top hat: A top hat is a kind of tall, flat-crowned, broad-brimmed hat worn by men throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, now usually worn only with morning dress or evening dress.
* Trilby Hat
* Ushanka: Russian fur hat with fold down ear flaps
Info taken from Wikipedia.