Hats
Type |
|
---|---|
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 |
Read more about this topic: List Of Headgear
Famous quotes containing the word hats:
“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 hounds leg on the floor as he scratches contentedly. Oldtime hunters say that fleas are a hounds 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)
“My consolation is to think of the women I have known, now that there is no longer such thing as elegance. But how can people who contemplate these horrible creatures under their hats covered in pigeon-houses or gardens, how can they understand the charm of seeing Madame Swann wearing a simple mauve cap or a small hat surmounted by a straight iris?”
—Marcel Proust (18711922)
“There is the rich quarter, with its houses of pink and white, and
its crumbling, leafy terraces.
There is the poorer quarter, its homes a deep blue.
There is the market, where men are selling hats and swatting flies”
—John Ashbery (b. 1927)