Sunday, 29 July 2018

Straw Boater


Leading on from the school hat theme to a straw hat theme we have the boater which was a common part of the British, United States and South Africa and a few others boys school uniforms.


The Straw Boater is also known as the simply the Boater, plus the Skimmer, the Cady, the Canotier, the Basher, the Katie, the Somer and the Sennit.


Also worn in Japan were can be called the Can-can Hat or the Suruken.

The straw boater is equally a fashionable women's hat.


Straw boaters are a great summer hat, they were popular in the 19th and early 20th Century but have since gone out of fashion except for rowing events or barbershop music groups.


The Straw boater is normally made of a stiff sennit straw and has a flat crown and brim, usually with a ribbon around the crown.


A fact from Wikipedia says they were supposedly worn by FBI agents as a sort of unofficial uniform in the early 20th Century. 

Saturday, 21 July 2018

Bad Scholars Hat

Dunce's hat



The dunce's hat was given to children in Victorian schools as a punishment to pupils who were disruptive, clowned around and did not want to learn.


The hat was traditionally a tall white cardboard cone and painted with a big D or the word dunce.


As well as wearing the hat the children were made to stand in a corner and left to be mocked by their fellow pupils.


I'm not sure this tactic or punishment actually worked as I suspect the children made to wear the cap did not care, were made class heroes, but even more likely they probably had some actual real learning difficulty which the Victorian teachers had no way of understanding or were trained to deal with.


Saturday, 14 July 2018

Academics Hat


The Mortaboard, Square Cap, Corner Cap, Oxford Cap


The Mortarboard cap named after bricklayers tool for holding mortar or perhaps it was the other way round not sure.


This style of cap dates back at least as far 16th Century where it was used in the uniform of those attending universities in Europe, forms of this hat go back even further were its seen in Italian paintings of 15th Century. 

In the past, this form of hats was the default hat for the teaching profession and mandatory uniform at Oxford University. Now the mortarboard is seen across the worlds colleges and university, mostly in graduation ceremonies, were once the ceremony is over its thrown into the air.




Monday, 9 July 2018

A Hat for Scholar

This is sort of brimless cloth hat is a bit odd, it could have been worn in any period from the 13th to 19th century, although I've grouped it in the so-called renaissance, 16th C period


The hat is made like a muffin cap with an abundance of material fixed to a smaller headband, this one is made so the headband becomes hidden when worn.



The fabric green in colour is slightly eccentric style make this something that could be worn by a medieval scholar or a poet


Found for £2 in the bargain bin at a lrp fair