Monday, March 25, 2013

Where's your hat?

"It's cold out there so don't you go outside without a hat"!  That's something that my parents demanded of meBack in the day, they believed that your outfit wasn't complete without a hat or cap, not a baseball cap, to compliment your clothes and especially a nice suit and topcoat.   Not to mention that the hat provided protection from the elements.  My father and older brothers were very stylish in their hats and I'll bet your older male family members were as well.  Nowadays, it seems that wearing a hat is an exception today but once upon a time it was quite common.   

Superman Paul Robeson Sports a Homburg and his 
Son is wore an Apple Jack Cap


Gentleman Sports a Bowler Hat in the 1930s


Brother is Sharp from Head-to-Toe


Best Dressed Couple



Harlem Residents during World War II
As you can see not only did our parents and grandparents wore hats but the kids were also "decked out" in them.  


Well Dressed Little Boy


Author Richard Wright Sports a Fedora in the '40s

 

Young Martin Luther King in the '50s




Dapper Young Man with a Fedora




Dizz Sporting his Trademark Beret


Newsboy Cap



Brother with Wide Brim Fedora with his Lady in the '70s



 Trouble Man Marvin Gaye Sports a Kufi



Billy Dee Williams Sports Fedora in Lady Sings the Blues



Fedora Wearing Brothers 
Double-Date in the '70s






Hip Hop Brothers Sport Kangol Berets





Miles Davis Sports a Fedora from the Album Cover Decoy



Sean John Sports a Homburg

 


Super Model Renauld White in 
Homburg and Beret






Terrance Howard in Straw Fedora with
Phylicia Rashad and Anika Noni Rose



Mario Van Peeples in the Panama Straw Hat

  



It's been stated by many in the fashion industry that the decline in wearing hats was partly attributed to the election of John F. Kennedy as the president in 1960.  He was seen in public lots of time without a hat including his inaugurationHowever, if you saw pictures of the presidents that preceded him, Dwight Eisenhower and Harry Truman, they typically wore nice hats to complement their suits.  There may have been some truth to that but there were other factors as well.  For one thing, more folks became car owners in the '60s and going forward, which provided protection from the elements.  Naturally, people were out more in the elements before becoming car owners.  Another possibility is that the decline of men wearing hats corresponds, excluding Sundays, to the decline of women wearing hats.  I can recall that my mother and aunts wore  hats and scarves back in the day and I don't mean on Sundays; that  was a given.  Finally, some men go to hair stylists and don't want to chance messing up their hair. 

What are your thoughts?  As for me, I believe a man adds the "it factor" when they top off their attire with a nice hat or cap.  Think of it as "icing on the cake".  
 
By the way, since spring is upon us now is a good time to negotiate the purchase of a winter hat/cap.  

Photo Credits

Men of Color, Fashion, History and Fundamentals by Lloyd Boston 
Paul Robeson page157, Gentleman in the Bowler Hat 226

Best Dressed Couple 86, Harlem Residents 6, Well Dressed 

Little Boy 43, Young Martin Luther King 21, Dapper Young Man 154

Dizzy Gillespie 29, Brother with the Wide Brim Fedora 14

Marvin Gaye 53, Fedora Wearing Brothers 23, 

Hip Hop Brothers 155, Sean John 172, Renauld White 232, 

Black America: A Photographic Journey Past to Present by Marcia Smith
Brother Sharp Head-to-Toe 191, Richard Wright 396

Movie: Lady Sings the Blues, Billy Dee Williams

Miles Davis Album Cover: Decoy 

Walter McBride/Retna LTD:
Photo of Terrance Howard at Sardi's Restaraunt in New York City on May 8, 2008

Lee Roth/Roth Stock/PR Photos
Marion Van Peeples @ Lakawana Blues Feature Debut (HBO films) on February 3, 2005