List of Headgear - Hats

Hats

Type
Image
Akubra
Aviator hat
Balmoral
Baseball cap
Batting helmet
Beanie or skully and or visor beanie.
Bearskin cap
Beaver hat
Beret
Boater (also basher, skimmer, cady, katie, somer, or sennit hat)
Bobble hat
Boonie hat
Bowler or Derby
Bucket hat also fishing hat, ratting hat (UK) or Dixie Cup hat

(US)

Busby
Often confused with a Bearskin cap
Capuchon
Chilote cap
Chupalla
Cloche hat
Cricket cap
Combination cap, also peaked cap
Coonskin Cap
Cowboy hat, sometimes "Ten gallon hat"
Deerstalker
Fedora
Fez
Flat cap, also bunnet, cloth cap, driver cap, golf cap, or Windsor cap
Fruit hat
Garrison cap or side cap
Homburg
Greek fisherman's cap, also captain's cap
Karakul
Kepi
Kippah, also kippa, yarmulke or skullcap, Jewish

traditional

Kofia, worn in East Africa
Kufi, traditional cap worn by men of African descent, including the "Zulu crown".
Muir cap, the traditional leather biker-style cap worn by leathermen
Nasaq, the crocheted headgear of some Canadian Inuit
Nightcap
Newsboy cap, also Gatsby cap
Nón lá
Pakol
Patka
Pork pie hat
Rogatywka
Rumal
Šajkača
Salakot
Shpitzel
Skullcap, a name shared by a variety of headgear types
Sombrero
Straw hat
Student cap
Tam, or Tam o'Shanter
Taqiya, also tagiyah or Topi
Top hat (also, Topper)
Trilby
Tubeteika
Tuque, also knit hat, knit cap, sock cap, stocking cap,

watch cap, toboggan, ski cap or skull cap

Turban
Vueltiao A Colombian typical hat with woven and sewn dried tinted palm strips and indigenous figures.
Umbrella Hat A hat made from an umbrella that straps to the head. Has been made with mosquito netting.
Ushanka
Zucchetto

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Famous quotes containing the word hats:

    There are several natural phenomena which I shall have to have explained to me before I can keep on going as a resident member of the human race. One is the metamorphosis which hats and suits undergo exactly one week after their purchase, whereby they are changed from smart, intensely becoming articles of apparel into something children use when they want to “dress up like daddy.”
    Robert Benchley (1889–1945)

    Farmers in overalls and wide-brimmed straw hats lounge about the store on hot summer days, when the most common sound is the thump-thump-thump of a hound’s leg on the floor as he scratches contentedly. Oldtime hunters say that fleas are a hound’s salvation: his constant twisting and clawing in pursuit of the tormentors keeps his joints supple.
    —Administration in the State of Arka, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)