Ode To Hats! An Easter Thread

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Title
She won't bow to the hat / C.J. Taylor.
Summary
Print shows an elderly woman wearing late 19th century clothing labeled "Fashion", gesturing toward an "Easter Bonnet" atop a maypole around which many other women have gathered; a smartly-dressed young woman labeled "New Woman" refuses to participate.
Contributor Names
Taylor, Charles Jay, 1855-1929, artist
Created / Published
N.Y. : Published by Keppler & Schwarzmann, 1896 April 8.

Source: L.O.C.
 
:dance:
Yes!
These are pretty simple but come in all the colors of the rainbow and I though they would be perfect for Easter!


Now that is a hat! How dear is that, for a little girl? Wait until you have around 5 more, as Easters pass. Because they're your daughters, you'll never throw them away- so find a corner of the attic now. I'd offer to store them but our attic is strangely full..... few hats up there.

I'll take this thread as another opportunity to thank @donna for getting me into hats. I never wore them until last Summer, and now I'm hooked.

View attachment 182043


You girls are probably causing a rise in sales, with these photos. ' Hats, The Next Generation ', or, ' Hats, More Than Just A Place To Store Your Dead Pheasant '. Much cuter! Grew up wondering why dead birds were memorialized on hats, kind of a ' thing ' for awhile.
 
Yours is the first period mention I've seen of the name. Maybe someday I'll be ok with it.


A guess? Because the name seems to have been used in these romantic tales, with the usual, impossibly lovely heroine, young women picked it up as a name for their daughters. Bet you'll find more! You know, it's odd, how names go in and out of favor through generations? ' Edith ', for instance, was once the ' IT ' name, now we rarely see it. Yours sure seems to have weathered time gracefully.
 
Easter hat order number one = check! Amazon is super fast!
I only have two hats so far ~ white and tan. I need more colors, I think. I'm not quite Derby-level yet, but I'll get there!

I still don't know "good" hats from "bad" ones in terms of quality. CWT Ladies, feel free to help a clueless Yankee out.

You girls are probably causing a rise in sales, with these photos.
I hope so! I rarely see anyone wearing them around here. When I wear mine, it sticks out enough for strangers to comment. They are always nice comments, but I find it funny that people are motivated to say something.

Once while at the train museum, a man and I started chatting about a particular train and how old it was...what it must have seen in its time. And he said, "I can tell you appreciate the past just by the way you dress." (I had on a floral dress and my big white hat.) I think he meant that as a compliment. :giggle: That's how I've chosen to take it anyway.
 
I remember hats, and white gloves. Black or white patent leather shoes too. I still dress up for Easter, and I love my hats. I have quite a collection, many of them vintage. My head is small, so I find that the vintage hats fit best.

Oh! I have a picture hat story...While trying on hats for a Mothers Day tea given by my son's school, I was surprised by an older lady who walked up to me and said,"No dear, you don't wear it square on your head, you tilt it like so". Which she did. I bought the hat!!
 
Source : Wikicommons

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Ever wondered where the practice for wearing an Easter bonnet originated?

According to Christian tradition, the fashion for new bonnets came thanks to Easter being known as a time for renewal.

With the fasting of Lent over and people keen to mark the religious occasion, female churchgoers were eager to make and show off their new clothes, including hats.

So this started the tradition of wearing Easter bonnets.
The word "bonnet" is used rather than "hat", as it refers to the type of headgear that was popular at the time.

But it wasn't until the 1870s that the custom of Easter bonnets really took off thanks to the New York City Easter Parade.

This would see women dressed up to the nines parade along Fifth Avenue in Manhattan to flaunt their new hats.

The parade then grew in popularity and in the 1940s up to one million took part.

This was also partly due to the popularity of the 1948 film Easter Parade starring Fred Astaire and Julie Garland.
The New York parade takes place today with people keen to show off their new bonnets, although it is a much smaller affair with around 30,000 people taking part.

And now the trend is to wear the most outlandish hat possible and decorate it with model birds, eggs and even rabbits.

Source: The Sun, A News U.K. Company
 
Yep...I remember waiting impatiently to don my brand new hat, dress, patent leather shoes and white gloves my grandma bought me to debut Easter Sunday! Such a magnificent spring fashion show back then when no one would dare wear any less!

We must have had the same wonderful grandma. She loved Easter, and she dressed me up like I was going to the Easter Parade!
 
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This was also partly due to the popularity of the 1948 film Easter Parade starring Fred Astaire and Julie Garland.
The New York parade takes place today with people keen to show off their new bonnets, although it is a much smaller affair with around 30,000 people taking part.


Watched this the other night. They don't make movies like that anymore with all the glitz and glamor. Actually, I enjoy ogling the stunning outfits the actors wear, of course the dance scenes with Fred Astaire, Ann Miller, and Judy Garland - doesn't get any better than that. There's never been a better singer than Judy Garland.

Terrific movie, wonderful memories of Easters long past...
 
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Title
Puck Easter / L.M. Glackens.
Summary
Illustration shows a little girl taking all the colored eggs from the Easter Bunny's basket; she is putting them in her apron, but some have fallen on the ground and are broken. There is a hen wearing a bonnet in the background.
Contributor Names
Glackens, L. M. (Louis M.), 1866-1933, artist
Created / Published
N.Y. : J. Ottmann Lith. Co., Puck Bldg., 1903 April 8.

Source: L.O.C.
 
View attachment 182173
Title
Puck Easter / L.M. Glackens.
Summary
Illustration shows a little girl taking all the colored eggs from the Easter Bunny's basket; she is putting them in her apron, but some have fallen on the ground and are broken. There is a hen wearing a bonnet in the background.
Contributor Names
Glackens, L. M. (Louis M.), 1866-1933, artist
Created / Published
N.Y. : J. Ottmann Lith. Co., Puck Bldg., 1903 April 8.

Source: L.O.C.
Is that hen wearing the bonnet "Miss Prissy" of the Foghorn Leghorn cartoons still looking for a husband? LOL
 
View attachment 182109
Title
She won't bow to the hat / C.J. Taylor.
Summary
Print shows an elderly woman wearing late 19th century clothing labeled "Fashion", gesturing toward an "Easter Bonnet" atop a maypole around which many other women have gathered; a smartly-dressed young woman labeled "New Woman" refuses to participate.
Contributor Names
Taylor, Charles Jay, 1855-1929, artist
Created / Published
N.Y. : Published by Keppler & Schwarzmann, 1896 April 8.

Source: L.O.C.
Looks like one of those new fangled suffragette women to me!
 
View attachment 182124
Title
Puck Easter / Frank A. Nankivell '99.
Summary
Print shows a young messenger boy asking a fashionably dressed young woman to sign for the delivery of her Easter bonnet.
Contributor Names
Nankivell, Frank A. (Frank Arthur), 1869-1959, artist
Created / Published
N.Y. : Published by Keppler & Schwarzmann, 1899 April 5.

Source: L.O.C.
Oh my! Showing her petticoat with shoulders bared during daytime and all! ****ographic! LOL
 
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