
Archive for the 'Styles' Category
Cowboy Hats On Screen
Author: Cowgirl RobyneSince the19th century the cowboy hat has symbolized the American wild west. It has been a subject featured on big & small screens from the very beginning of movies & television. Tom Mix wore his cowboy hat on movie sets at the start of the 20th century. Born in 1880 in Mix, Pennsylvania, Tom grew up shortly after the creation of the first cowboy hat. His greatest achievements came portraying cowboys in western silent films like “Ranch Life in the Great Southwest.”
Leonard Franklin Slye first stepped on screen as Roy Rogers in 1928 in “Under the Western Stars.” Roy Rogers first became a regular part of American households on the radio waves. His radio show entertained the public for nine years before it moved to television’s small screen from 1951 to 1964. Roy Rogers and Dale Evans will always be remembered for “Happy Trails” and the many different cowboy hats that became synonymous with Roy.
Since then cowboy hat fans from the Lone Ranger to Tim McGraw have proudly worn their cowboy hats as a part of their daily routine.
You don’t have to be watching fiction to see cowboy hats on screen. Celebrities and politicians alike have made cowboy hats common attire. Presidents from Teddy Roosevelt and Herbert Hoover to Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush have all donned a cowboy hat in public appearances, both on & off camera.
Cowboy Hat Function and Fashion in History
Author: Cowgirl RobyneAll kinds of hats were seen in the west before the creation of the first cowboy hat in 1862. Depending on the occasion, a gentle (or not so gentle) man might be seen wearing anything from a top hat or derby to civil war headgear, tams or even a sailor hat. But once John Stetson created the first cowboy hat (then termed “The Boss of The Plains”) it became the preferred and most well known headwear of the west and ultimately an icon of Americana. In this case of cowboy hats, fashion followed function. On a westward trip in 1862, John Stetson is said to have amused his friends by showing them how to make cloth out of fur without weaving. He then took his ‘fur blanket’ and fashioned a huge hat with a wide brim as a joke.
Well, the joke turned out to be functional. In the wild west the weather could be terrible and cowpunchers across the plains worked in all of it. The wide brim of the cowboy hat turned out to be perfect for protecting the wearer from cold, rain and sun. In fact, in modern times, the American Academy of Dermatology has determined that all hats with brims of 2 3/8″ or larger meet their requirements of a total sun protection regimen to help prevent skin cancer and premature aging.
Early cowpokes found other uses for the large hats including fanning fires, fetching water in the the crown or sharing water with their most important traveling companion– their horse.
The new hat quickly became a western necessity. Shortly after the turn of the century, the cowboy hat began to be seen as infusing the wearer with a link to the wild west as well as an aura of recklessness & ruggedness. It still stands as a symbol of authority and elegance. Today it is the one item that can be worn in any corner of the world and receive immediate recognition.
The History of the Fedora
Author: Dusty_Trail
The fedora is a soft felt hat that is creased lengthwise down the crown and pinched in the front on both sides. Similar hats with a C-crown (with an indentation for the head in the top of the crown) are occasionally called fedoras. The term fedora was in use as early as 1891.
Beginning in the 20th century, the fedora came into use as an upper-class clothing accessory. Hats that resemble the soft felt version are often called fedoras even if they are made of straw or twill.
Fedoras did not start to become widespread until the late 1910s. Its popularity soared and eventually it eclipsed the similar-looking Homburg by the 1930s.
Beaver Brand Hats Timeline
Author: Cowgirl Robyne
January 1, 1860
Langenberg Hat Company founded under the name of Gauss, Hunicke & Krausse.
1863
Mr. Krausse sold his interest account of failing health and name changed to Gauss-Hunicke & Company.
1881
Incorporated as Gauss-Hunicke Hat Company.
1885
Mr. Hunicke retired and corporation name changed to Gauss-Shelton Hat Company.
1901
Corporation name changed to Gauss-Langenberg Hat Company.
1919
Name changed to Langenberg Hat Compan