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Haircut makes the difference!

swisslet

New in Town
Messages
43
Location
UK
I went for a haircut this afternoon. It's only been a month since I last went, but I'm pretty thin on top these days, and my remaining hair is pretty thick, so I like to keep it short to stop if padding out. As usual, I went for the clipper option.....down to grade 1.5.

...and when I got home, I found that my fedora was noticeably bigger on my head. Certainly big enough that I needed to slip some foam under the sweat.

I know it's not rocket science that this should be the case, but I'm quietly amused this evening that even my pitiful hair made such a difference.

You gotta love hats, eh?

How the hell do you people with proper heads of hair manage?

ST
 

HarpPlayerGene

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,682
Location
North Central Florida
Hair Guage

Yup, that's when I know it's time to go for a trim; when the old hat starts fitting just a little too snug. Yet another practical reason to use as an excuse when satisfying the compulsive hat collector within.
 

frijoli

One of the Regulars
Messages
269
Location
Northwest, NC
I have very thick hair. When I first started looking at hats, I measured myself at a heavy 7 3/8. I was on a diet and got a haircut while shopping for a couple hats and now I can get a 7 1/8 on my head snuggly and comfortable with a 7 1/4. I have 4 oversize hats now!

see my sig.

Clay
 

DrSpeed

One of the Regulars
Messages
128
Location
Netherlands
Being bald has advantages

Having very little hair left, I just shave my head, so no problems there.
My main hat excuse is that, without hair, I need protection from the elements :D .
 

swisslet

New in Town
Messages
43
Location
UK
Well, I went for a good long walk in my hat today, and sweated a whole load into the leather sweatband, and I can already feel the hat fitting a lot better on my head - haircut or no haircut!

DrSpeed - I'm very much in your club, brother....

ST
 

PabloElFlamenco

Practically Family
Messages
581
Location
near Brussels, Belgium
Almost cut my hair, just happened the other day... let's say I'm a "longhair". Alas, grey. But long. I have also, at times, had a skinhead type haircut and, yes, it makes a big difference for the hat which, in that case, is too big.
My hair is thin and un-curled, and usually I make a pony tail (for work, as well as comfort: no loose flying hair tickling my face, a real nuisance that is). My hats fit well, with the pony tail. When I don't do the pony tail, the hat has a tendency to "slide" upon the layers of hair, and doesn't stay put snugly at all.
I guess hats go best with short hair.
 

Roadrunner

One of the Regulars
Messages
140
Location
NW PA
Well I'm in the Air Force Reserve, so my hair never gets too long. I have noticed that my hat gets loose when I get the sides trimmed, but not so much that it no longer fits.
 

Stan

A-List Customer
Messages
336
Location
Raleigh, NC
It's a problem that isn't a problem

Hi,

Oh, dear. How to say this? I guess just blurt it out!

I have too much hair! :eusa_doh:

I really hate to say that, since so many others have the opposite problem....

I wear it in a crewcut 3/4 of the year. Otherwise, it gets to be too hot most of the time. However, with it cut so short, the sun is bad, so that's the main reason I wear a hat.

In the winter, I let it grow into what is known as a 'regular'. I still get it trimmed quite often, though.

Anyway, the point here is that I get to mess with padding in the sweatband on a regular basis. I have to put some in when I wear the crewcut and take it out when I wear the regular.

Since I'm now growing my collection, I'm beginning to split my sizes - 7 1/8 for the regular and 7 1/16 for the crewcut. I get the 7 1/16 by stretching a size 7 a bit.

Notice that this means I need *two* sets of hats. That's a great explanation to have handy for the wife when yet another box shows up! :D

So, you see that it's a problem, but not really a problem!

Later!

Stan
 

GI Joe

Familiar Face
Stan said:
Since I'm now growing my collection, I'm beginning to split my sizes - 7 1/8 for the regular and 7 1/16 for the crewcut. I get the 7 1/16 by stretching a size 7 a bit.

Notice that this means I need *two* sets of hats. That's a great explanation to have handy for the wife when yet another box shows up! :D

Stan,

As we say in the software racket, "That's not a bug, it's a feature!'
 

VetPsychWars

A-List Customer
Messages
410
Location
Greenfield Wisconsin
Finally starting to get thin enough, especially with my fine hair, that it was clear there were empty spots with the previous hair style.

No point in fighting nature, got a buzz cut like I used to as a kid in the summer (every boy did back then).

Funny how hats I thought were too tight fit pretty good now!

Gotta love it.
 

1961MJS

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,363
Location
Norman Oklahoma
Hi
Never had a flat top when they were in, I've always had a part until college and my barber said to pull it straight back. At Damn near 60, I have a comb over. My hair started to part again, then the hair under it started to leave..... I always thought you were supposed to comb it over to hide the bald spots, not comb it over to prepare for them.
Later
 
Messages
19,122
Location
Funkytown, USA
On that note, does anyone wear a flat top anymore?

Not since Drew Carey let his hair grow out.

I usually had a "Burr," what is commonly called a buzz-cut. I had a flat-top at least once, as I wanted to look like Dad (and Pete Rose). I remember the barber at one time trying to talk me into a "Pineapple," Which was a burr, but he'd leave a shock of hair longer at the front.
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,331
Location
New Forest
tony curtis.jpg


In the fifties the young men in the UK, all wanted to have the look that the actor, Tony Curtis sported: So popular did it become that barbers started calling the style: "Tony Curtis." Not for me though, I thought that quiff at the front resembled a tricorn hat from the seventeenth century.
 
Messages
12,468
Location
Germany
View attachment 286251

In the fifties the young men in the UK, all wanted to have the look that the actor, Tony Curtis sported: So popular did it become that barbers started calling the style: "Tony Curtis." Not for me though, I thought that quiff at the front resembled a tricorn hat from the seventeenth century.

I think, he looked great in the private matter. :cool:

7781451540_d8c21c77d7_o.jpg
 
Messages
10,473
Location
Boston area
View attachment 286251

In the fifties the young men in the UK, all wanted to have the look that the actor, Tony Curtis sported: So popular did it become that barbers started calling the style: "Tony Curtis." Not for me though, I thought that quiff at the front resembled a tricorn hat from the seventeenth century.

Bernie Schwartz was a talented man of style. But when he changed his name to Tony Curtis, everything fell into place for him.
 

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