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Panama Hat Thread

Messages
15,026
Location
Buffalo, NY
A follow-up to Rick Blaine's post above from the new owner of the mysterious ventilated Brighton Hat. My search for Brighton Hats and Rain-Leigh have come up empty so far (I hope my skilled Google searcher friends here will show us more), but I did have success with the patent referenced inside the hat. US 2026392 is a patent for a process to make an "imitation Bangkok hat" with water resistant properties. The material appears to to be paper fiber, woven in a very tight weave and then treated with a chemical bath to make the final product waterproof and washable. This patent is referenced in subsequent (1954, 1956) patents by Frank Lee and Hat Corporation of America. Is it 1930s or 1950s? Read on...

The hat weighs 3.1 ounces, measures 4 1/2" to the top of the optimo ridge and has a 2 1/4" brim. The form, dimensions and some elements of manufacture feel 1930s. I wasn't sure...

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... until I found a small wad of paper tightly folded underneath the sweatband at the front of the hat. Thank goodness for small headed men!

rain-leigh9.jpg
 

carouselvic

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,934
Location
Kansas
Not sure of the patent numbers. Many years ago I sent a day on the computer tracing the origins of the Bankaru, Bangora, Balibuntal, Baku and Toyo hats of the Far East. These photos were some of the machines that would weave the paper hats that helped bring an end to the handmade Baku of talipot palm and the buntal hats of buri Palm.
 
Messages
15,259
Location
Arlington, Virginia
A follow-up to Rick Blaine's post above from the new owner of the mysterious ventilated Brighton Hat. My search for Brighton Hats and Rain-Leigh have come up empty so far (I hope my skilled Google searcher friends here will show us more), but I did have success with the patent referenced inside the hat. US 2026392 is a patent for a process to make an "imitation Bangkok hat" with water resistant properties. The material appears to to be paper fiber, woven in a very tight weave and then treated with a chemical bath to make the final product waterproof and washable. This patent is referenced in subsequent (1954, 1956) patents by Frank Lee and Hat Corporation of America. Is it 1930s or 1950s? Read on...

The hat weighs 3.1 ounces, measures 4 1/2" to the top of the optimo ridge and has a 2 1/4" brim. The form, dimensions and some elements of manufacture feel 1930s. I wasn't sure...
... until I found a small wad of paper tightly folded underneath the sweatband at the front of the hat. Thank goodness for small headed men!

rain-leigh9.jpg

Wow! Great story, and a great piece to add to your collection. Congratulations are in order, Alan.
 

mikespens

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,913
Location
Tacoma, Wa
Fantastic machine, thanks for posting that Vic. Also glad the hat went to you Alan, it was very tempting to me as well but I'm trying to remain a hat wearer rather than a hat collector. It's a fine line I may have already crossed though ;)

When you think about it, a waterproof "straw" hat makes perfect sense in the tropical climates they were worn it.
 

Denton

One of the Regulars
Messages
281
Location
Los Angeles
Great hat, Alan! It's amazing to me how nice some of the early paper straws can be. I'm also thinking of a hat from the 1920s belonging to Garret, and Mikespens's burlap hat.
 

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