-
26th April 06, 12:04 AM
#1
Just realized my avatar has me wearing my favorite sun-repellant headwear, my Tilly Endurables T3, from http://www.tilley.com/.
Best rain, sun, hiking, kayaking, beach walking hat ever.
42
-
-
 Originally Posted by Paco500
Me, stepfather and kids at Smokey Mnts. National Park. As I was just outside of Pigeon Forge, TN (home of Dollywood) I thought the Cowboy hat was appropriate.
Funny thing... I have seen, maybe, half a dozen cowboy hats outside of concerts since I moved to East Tennesee (50 miles from Dollywood) 19 years ago. I saw many more growing up in Houston.
-
-
26th April 06, 12:43 AM
#3
 Originally Posted by Retro Red
It is a Robertson Hunting tartan, but you can't see the detail of the tartan well in the shade. If only I had a fine photographer like you, P1M...
.
the photo looks fine... but mon! that kilt looks dark.... certainly looks darker than my Robertson Hunting....
-
-
26th April 06, 12:57 AM
#4
and much darker than mine as well
-
-
26th April 06, 03:54 AM
#5
The only hat I wear with kilts is a baseball cap. This is only to shade my eyes when playing photographer, and after a long mountain bike ride to cover helmet hair. I do wear a fedora (Akubra) in the winter, but only (forgive me) when wearing pants in the cold.
Jack
-
-
26th April 06, 04:57 AM
#6
Since I grew above the hair line, a hat is a necessity for me. For day to day wear, it's usually a flat cap (or driving cap, or whatever you want to call it). They are great in that I can fold them over and put them in a jacket pocket when I go inside. Plus, they seem to look good with a kilt.
Sometimes I wear a ball cap, especially for the really casual events.
I really like cowboy hats and other wide brimmed hats and think I look good in them, but I have a hard time dealing with them. What do you do with them when you're not wearing them? I was taught not to wear a hat indoors and especially not when eating. During those times, if there is not a hook or rack somewhere nearby to hang the hat, I can never figure out what to do with it.
We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance. - Japanese Proverb
-
-
26th April 06, 05:52 AM
#7
 Originally Posted by davedove
Since I grew above the hair line, a hat is a necessity for me. For day to day wear, it's usually a flat cap (or driving cap, or whatever you want to call it). They are great in that I can fold them over and put them in a jacket pocket when I go inside. Plus, they seem to look good with a kilt.
Sometimes I wear a ball cap, especially for the really casual events.
I really like cowboy hats and other wide brimmed hats and think I look good in them, but I have a hard time dealing with them. What do you do with them when you're not wearing them? I was taught not to wear a hat indoors and especially not when eating. During those times, if there is not a hook or rack somewhere nearby to hang the hat, I can never figure out what to do with it.
I guess as I consider the hat a necessity, I find a way to deal with it. Hang it on a chair back, put it in my lap or carry it in my hand.
I'm perhaps less formal in that I will not always take my hat off when stepping inside, but it always comes off at the table and generally when interacting with people.
42
-
-
26th April 06, 06:17 AM
#8
On the subject of hats,maybe I can get a little help. When I was a kid, my mother and I bought my dad a cap in an Irish shop in Louisville, KY (gone now), that was called an Irish fisherman's hat. Dad wore it for years till it fell apart. I have have tried to find another (one for him, one for me) with no success. The cap was corduroy and had a higher crown than the flat Irish tweed caps you usually see. In fact it looks more like a Greek fisherman's cap that I have found on the web, though the design is slightly different. I have searched Celtic stores and the web, and no one seems to know what I'm talking about (what is it about me and impossible to find hats).
Any help would be appreciated.
Adam
-
-
26th April 06, 07:17 AM
#9
Adam,
Maybe this Skipper Cap from Hanna Hats is what you're looking for? Or, maybe this Irish Fishermans Cap from American Bay Outfitters?
Last edited by MacSimoin; 26th April 06 at 05:21 PM.
-
-
Good post Randy,
I don't wear hats a lot, but I do wear them...for sun, foul weather, or a "look."
Wear wide brim hats for hiking or sun protection, boonie hats for hiking, baseball caps for knocking around, Irish type hats..guess their skullys (?), even Greek Fisherman's hats with my kilts. Wore my father's War II Army Air Corps cap for last year's Veteran's Day parade.
Don't have any bonnets or berets or caps with names I can't spell.
Ron
Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
"I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks