I still don't understand how a hat ever gets wet though.
So when it rains, you guys wear felt hats, but don't your clothes and shoes get wet too? Even if the hat can resist rain, the rest of the outfit isn't exactly water-resistant.
I've found that I don't get near as wet when I have a nice size hat on unless I'm just tooling around in the rain. I can walk to my car in a steady drizzle or nice shower and barely get wet at all. I wear a hat every where I go every day.
Get him a nice fur fedora.. and time will have spoken.My thirty-four-year-old son dislikes hats and doesn't wear any at all. (Just wait until his hair starts to thin!) However, my twenty-two-year-old nephew wears caps or stingy brim hats most of the time. Will he eventually move up to fur felt fedoras? Only time will tell.
Particularly if you are or have been W.M.I am also a "Master Mason" and if anyone knows anything about Masons (except the crap on the History Channel) you will know that we really like our hats!
Particularly if you are or have been W.M.
That's one thing I'll miss if hats do make a comeback, I'll no longer be "the guy with the hat".
I just can't wait for all of the newbies to get tired of whatever fad there may be and for all of their former hats to show up in the flea markets of the world.
Hmm!
Flea market hats .... Flea market Penmans and ABs and Art Fawcetts .... hmmm!
Sorry, I have to excuse myself now ...
Sam
One word: trenchcoat (or is that supposed to be two words?). With a good trenchcoat and a fedora, there's no need for an umbrella. Shoes will get wet no matter what you're wearing/carrying on top.I still don't understand how a hat ever gets wet though.
So when it rains, you guys wear felt hats, but don't your clothes and shoes get wet too? Even if the hat can resist rain, the rest of the outfit isn't exactly water-resistant.
One word: trenchcoat (or is that supposed to be two words?). With a good trenchcoat and a fedora, there's no need for an umbrella. Shoes will get wet no matter what you're wearing/carrying on top.