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Encyclopedia > Porkpie hat

A pork pie hat is a felt hat, similer to a Trilby, dating from the middle 19th century, much the same as a fedora, but with a flattened top. The crown is short, and has a characteristic indent all the way around, rather than the "pinch crown" typically seen on fedoras and homburgs. It gets its name from its resemblance to a pork pie. The brim on a pork pie hat is generally on the smaller side, and is worn up, though it can be worn down in the front. The hats come in straw varieties as well. A trilby or trilby hat is a soft felt mens hat with a narrow brim and a deeply indented crown. ... Alternative meaning: Nineteenth Century (periodical) (18th century — 19th century — 20th century — more centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 19th century was that century which lasted from 1801-1900 in the sense of the Gregorian calendar. ... A fedora, which in this case has been pinched at the front and being worn pushed back on the head, with the front of the brim bent down over the eyes. ... Pork pie is a traditional British food. ...


Pork pie hats are often associated with jazz culture, though more recently they have had strong associations with ska. Charles Mingus wrote an elegy for jazz saxophone great Lester Young called "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat". In Britain they were popularized in the 1960s Rude Boy movement in Britain; then later adopted by the skinheads. The Pork-Pie was a staple of the British "man-about-town" for many years, before its association with any particular youth subculture. Jazz is an original American musical art form originating around the early 1920s in New Orleans, rooted in Western music technique and theory, and is marked by the profound cultural contributions of African Americans. ... Ska is a form of Jamaican music which began in the early 1960s. ... Charles Mingus (April 22, 1922 – January 5, 1979), also known as Charlie Mingus, was an American jazz bassist, composer, bandleader, and occasional pianist. ... Lester Willis Young, nicknamed Prez (August 27, 1909 – March 15, 1959) was an American jazz tenor saxophonist and clarinetist. ... Rude boy, rudie, rudi or rudy is a subculture that developed in the early 1960s in Jamaica and has close ties to skinhead culture. ... Skinheads, named after their shaven heads, are members of a subculture that originated in Britain in the 1960s, where they were closely tied to the Rude Boys of the West Indies and the Mods of the UK. Skinhead with scooter // Categories There are different types of skinheads, falling into three...


Silent film comedian Buster Keaton often wore pork-pie hats. Musician Pete Doherty has made the pork-pie hat famous in recent years. Joseph Frank Keaton Jr. ... Peter Doherty Pete Doherty (born 12 March 1979) is the singer for the band Babyshambles, and formerly co-frontman and songwriter (along with Carl Barat) of The Libertines, with whom he first shot to fame and appeared in the public eye. ...


Example of a pork-pie hat


In the classic Warner Bros. cartoon "Three Little Bops" the three pigs, all jazz musicians, are all wearing--you guessed it--porkpie hats.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Pork pie hat - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (351 words)
A pork pie hat or porkpie hat is type of felt hat (although they have also been made of straw).
Pork pie hats are often associated with jazz, blues and ska musicians and fans.
The pork pie hat was prevalent in New Guinea in January 1944, when Australian troops had just defeated a Japanese stronghold at Kankiryo Saddle.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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