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Difference Between Trilbys and Stingy Brim Fedoras?

FedoraFan112390

Practically Family
Messages
646
Location
Brooklyn, NY
What is the difference between a trilby and a stingy brim fedora? Are they one and the same? Because I've seen them listed as different hats yet they don't seem to have any major differences.
 

Matt Deckard

Man of Action
Messages
10,045
Location
A devout capitalist in Los Angeles CA.
I think today a Trilby is associated with a fedora with a very tapered crown, a short brim and a narrow ribbon. Mostly worn by aristocratic brits or cardigan clad ice truck drivers who don't get their modern hats reblocked when they shrink.

Opinion/
It's a fedora, though the brit hatters like to differentiate between fedora and trilby so they can sell the trilby with it's own UK identity.
 

J.T.Marcus

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,354
Location
Mineola, Texas
Somewhere along the way, seems like I got the impression a Trilby might have a more pronounced upturn on the back brim. Other than that... :)
 

BellyTank

I'll Lock Up
It seems like the average Trilby (in comparison to the average Fedora)has a lower, more tapered crown and a smaller brim.
Quite often, a cloth hat, Tweed- a sporting hat- for the racetrack or the country.
In the case of Eccles, a metal Trilby

Like the Fedora, the name comes from the Theatre.


B
T
 

tandmark

One of the Regulars
Messages
150
Location
Seattle
Howdy,

The last time I was looking at photos of hats labelled as being trilbys by online retail hat shops, what was being shown in those photos looked exactly like stingy brim fedoras. I think it's a distinction without a difference.

I seem to recall a similar thread about six months ago, in which one hat *maker* claimed there was a difference. Seems to me that he was talking about the first trilbys of the late 1800s, which might have had some special features. Though I could be mis-remembering about that.

Still, it's worth a bet (if I were the betting type, and if there were any way to do a serious check of the facts) that there might not be anyone alive today who remembers a time when the trilby and the stingy brim fedora weren't basically the same style of hat.

Cheers,
Mark
 

NonEntity

Suspended
Messages
281
Location
Southeastern U.S.
I, too, have long wondered about the difference, if any, between a trilby and a stingy-brim fedora.

Not a fact but just an observation, though, is that vendors seem to label as "trilby," in contrast to "stingy brim," those hats which appear to have a taller, more tapered crown, often an even narrower brim (1 to 1 1/2 inches), and a very slight to no pinch.

Now, to complicate the issue, what, exactly, is a Rex? Yeah, I know it's named after the type of hat famous actor/drunkard Rex Harrison often wore, and that, of course, it must be constructed of wool tweed to qualify, but is there anything else that distinguishes the narrow-brimmed Rex, such as the shape or bash, from a trilby or stingy brim fedora?

I've even seen similar woven wool headgear marketed as a "British walking hat." Again, is there any specific criteria to differentiate it from a Rex or, excepting the material, the others?

Methinks all these terms are probably just marketing, but if not, I'd really like to know.
 

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