Feraud
Bartender
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- 17,190
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- Hardlucksville, NY
I don't see why you would not leave it on in the situation you describe.
retrofashion said:Going back to the secretary (yes, a lady), if all you are doing is coming in your office and signing some papers for the day and leaving right away, possibly not even sitting down at our desk, should the hat still come off?
Feraud said:
retrofashion said:Lets say the hypothetical situation where you come in into your office, your secretary follows you in with some papers to sign, you sign them at your desk, have a quick chat with her, maybe about appointments etc and is right out of the door again, all in like 5 minutes. Should you take the hat off for this short length?
retrofashion said:Or if you need to come in into an employee room to give them some instructions and the like, not even sitting down or anything, should you take the hat off, even if they are men?
retrofashion said:We are talking a big office building for a big company here, if it matters
Brad Bowers said:Ack, he's grabbing it by the crown!!!lol
Brad
AXL DEMOCRACY said:Is it that bad to take your hat off by the crown? I always felt taking it off by the brim ruins the straightness and stiffness of the brim that I like.
The idea is a wonky brim can be re-flanged (is the the correct terminology?) but a crown with a hole is not as easily fixed.AXL DEMOCRACY said:But I guess a brim is easier to fix/repair than a crown?
How about: These questions have been discussed at length (ad nauseam) on TFL. Please feel free to peruse the archives.markapsolon said:The questions are below.
Please feel free to go into detail with your answers:
Without wading through all the history, I personally would say this based on my five or six years of hat-wearing, for whatever that's worth.markapsolon said:1. Does a man or woman really have to take their hat off when going indoors? What do you think about Public places (What is a public place to you)? What do you think about Malls? Wal-mart? The local grocery store? concerts? Movies? Banks? Bars? Diners? Restaurants? The post office? DMV?, etc?
2. When can a man justify breaking the rules of hat etiquette?
3. Should a man "tip" his hat to a lady or remove his hat when in her presents? Why or why not?
4. What parts of hat etiquette do you feel should be modified or changed? or do you feel it is prefect the way it is? Why or why not?
Puzzicato said:I thought that a woman was only expected to remove her hat if she was provided with a looking glass so that she could tidy her hair!
markapsolon said:1. Does a man or woman really have to take their hat off when going indoors? What do you think about Public places (What is a public place to you)? What do you think about Malls? Wal-mart? The local grocery store? concerts? Movies? Banks? Bars? Diners? Restaurants? The post office? DMV?, etc?
2. When can a man justify breaking the rules of hat etiquette?
3. Should a man "tip" his hat to a lady or remove his hat when in her presence? Why or why not?
4. What parts of hat etiquette do you feel should be modified or changed? Or do you feel it is perfect the way it is? Why or why not?
markapsolon said:1. Does a man or woman really have to take their hat off when going indoors? What do you think about Public places (What is a public place to you)? What do you think about Malls? Wal-mart? The local grocery store? concerts? Movies? Banks? Bars? Diners? Restaurants? The post office? DMV?, etc?
2. When can a man justify breaking the rules of hat etiquette?
3. Should a man "tip" his hat to a lady or remove his hat when in her presents? Why or why not?
4. What parts of hat etiquette do you feel should be modified or changed? or do you feel it is prefect the way it is? Why or why not?
Exactly my point. Once I offered my subway seat to a young woman, just because she was a woman. She got all embarrassed and declined. So I stopped offering seats to women in that old-fashioned way, because it's not expected anymore and it just doesn't register. I'm afraid that a man in a vintage hat going around tipping it to the ladies would be viewed as living in a pretend world.Wolfwood said:Typos marked in red.
3. No. I'm already getting enough wondering looks when I open a door to a lady - I'm not going to compound on it by starting to remove my hat or tipping it to them.
danofarlington said:Exactly my point. Once I offered my subway seat to a young woman, just because she was a woman. She got all embarrassed and declined. So I stopped offering seats to women in that old-fashioned way, because it's not expected anymore and it just doesn't register. I'm afraid that a man in a vintage hat going around tipping it to the ladies would be viewed as living in a pretend world.