Sunday, October 02, 2016

Get stuffed.



Cotton 'driving cap' from MINI USA Motoring Accessories. Unstructured, one-size fits all, elastic back, embroidered MINI logo.

I leave it in my car as an emergency cap, but I can also stuff it into my jacket pocket (or back pocket, or camera bag pocket). Not much else to say. Not much eye protection from the sun, but good scalp protection from the sunroof and cool air.

Cool air: coming soon to a sub-tropical region near me.

Monday, April 11, 2016

TR Negative.


Another Terlingua cap, specifically a Terlingua Racing Team cap.  Gold on black instead of the traditional black on gold.

I needed another cap.

Monday, April 04, 2016

Old soldiers never die. They fade into yard hats.


This is a hybrid hat. The leather band with pheasant feathers came off a 'lawn-deceased' Stetson straw I had many years ago (purchased at the flagship Neiman-Marcus store in downtown Dallas in the early 1990s). This hat came from REI. It's made of 'Toyo Straw', which isn't straw at all, but rolled paper.

I usually wear it backwards, so the torn brim is to the back. I'm cool that way.

Sunday, March 27, 2016

All hat, no cattle.


A Stetson 10X 'Rancher' straw with side vents. Like me, it was made in Texas by Texans.

Wednesday, March 02, 2016

Happy Anniversary! Remember the Alamo!


March 2nd, 2016: The 180th Anniversary of Texas' Declaration of Independence. The 30th Anniversary of P.M. and Linden's Declaration of Interdependence.

The cotton bucket hat displays the image of the Zavala Flag from the Texas War of Independence (although the flag design was white on a blue background). A white hat is much more functional in the sub-tropics than a royal blue one would be.


Monday, December 07, 2015

Me and Chester.


Here's a borrowed cap. It belongs to my wife, Linden. She got it when we were at Wurstfest in New Braunfels last month. It was the last one they had. None for me. Made in China, it's 70% wool and 30% nylon. It's an 'Official Oktoberfest' cap. I like it a lot. Loden green is my color.

Standing behind me is a bronze statue of Fleet Admiral Chester A. Nimitz, Commander in Chief, United States Pacific Fleet (CinCPac), for U.S. naval forces and Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas (CinCPOA), for U.S. and Allied air, land, and sea forces during World War II. He's wearing a nice cap, too.

The statue stands at the National Museum of the Pacific War in Fredericksburg, Texas (Nimitz's home town). Behind his statue is part of the old 'ship-like' Nimitz Hotel that belonged to his father.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Gad zooks! A new hat!


A couple of years ago (or less), I gave my mesh-back cap to my nephew living in So-Cal... sort of a talisman. He's in the tv/film industry, he admired my cap (Cooper's Old Tyme Pit BBQ, Llano, Texas), and so I gave it to him.

I've been half-heartedly keeping my eyes open for a replacement, but nothing suitable presented itself. Until today.

Made in Viet Nam (further blurring of the line between victory and defeat). All black, 1/2 mesh, hook'n loop closure strap... and a simple logo design that is graphically striking.

Dzuik's Meat Market is in Castroville, Texas, and is a Texas-Polish butcher in a Texas-Alsatian town. We went there today as my birthday treat. We got a steak, some chicken fajita meat, a couple of dried beef-and-pork sausages (regular and jalapeño), and a pound of parisa.

Nice hat from Dzuik's (pronounced GEE-ucks in Polish... Zooks in Texan).

Editor's Note: I have been informed by a young lady of the Dzuik family that they pronounce Dzuik as "Juke." Well, there you go.

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Modeling.


Pop crowns Princess Claire. When asked for a comment, the new princess stated, "Pop's silly."

Thursday, February 05, 2015

The Regime Strikes Back


Scala Campaign hat. I saw it at Whole Earth Provisions. Thick, hard, fur felt. The brim is so stiff, Odd-Job could have utilized it as a weapon. Dudley Do-Right could have saved a maiden from a train. Black Jack Pershing could have captured Poncho Villa.

In America, 'want' is the same as 'need'.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Das ist ein interessanter hut!


On our recent trip to New Braunfels for Wurstfest, we visited Naegelin's Bakery for a cream horn. They had this ball-cap in the same Game Guard West Texas hunter's camo as the Cooper's BBQ cap I recently featured. This one doesn't have a mesh back, and isn't 'distressed'. I like it a lot.

I also like Naegelin's Bakery a lot, too... mainly because they are the oldest bakery in Texas (since 1868).







Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Coolsville

It's the first cold day of the season. Whereas I usually wear a hat to prevent a sunburned scalp and possible skin cancer, this kind of weather requires a hat of some sort to prevent brain freeze.

This new one is a cotton cap made in Bangladesh. Comfy, unstructured, and basic-black stylish, this is a suitable cap for any occasion... especially for forays into Austin to remind them that the town sucks at jazz.

You can have one too for only $10 a month! Plus, you get to support one of the best jazz radio stations in the land, Trinity University's KRTU (San Antonio).

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Smokin' Hot Pop


The temperature was 105F today. An appropriate hat is the 'trucker' hat I picked up in Llano at the first of the month. I don't usually like these mesh-back style hats, but this one had four things that won me over:
  1. Texas-themed camo, featuring live oak and prickly pear cactus.
  2. The mesh in the back of the cap is soft to the touch, unlike all the previous trucker caps I've tried.
  3. The cap is well ventilated (due to the mesh).
  4. It promotes Coopers Old Time Pit Bar-B-Que.
Yee-hah, pardner!

Sunday, July 06, 2014

Straw Man Cowboy Hat


Nothing is quite as iconic as a straw cowboy hat in black & white. The ventilation works. Those are the Mexican Chisos hills behind me, rising above the Rio Grande at my back.

The hat is Bangora paper-straw, made in the U.S.A. by Beaver Hats ("Since 1860").

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Return engagement.



The Panama returns to the Williams Tavern in Washington, Arkansas (the Hillbilly Williamsburg).

Had the $4.49 Cheeseburger Plate Special (cheeseburger, fries, corn poppers, or twice-baked potatoes, iced tea). Good, too.

There was a painting of an early proprietor hanging over the fireplace. Comments were made.


Editor's Note: Well, it actually was a different Panama I wore here before.




- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Thursday, March 13, 2014

The Italian Job


Surely this has been featured before, but here it is again. It's a lambswool ball-cap made in Italy. Very soft, very comfortable, very handsome. I added a small badge/lapel pin, that I purchased at the Dallas Museum of Art, to the cap's front that reads,
miso·ne·ism : n. \ˌmis-ə-ˈnē-ˌiz-əm\  : a hatred, fear, or intolerance of innovation or change 
 Some think it fits me. The cap certainly does. 

P.S. This shot was taken this morning in the lobby of my local MINI dealership, waiting during my third visit for the same service issue.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Keep calm and wear a hat.



An unstructured 'ball-cap' sourced from the same online retailer as the previous cap, BBC America. Nice long visor for blocking the sun. Nice cotton material to allow some evaporative cooling. My Anglophilia is showing.

Saturday, March 01, 2014

An Anglo-Irish Tragedy: the Black Sheep


This is a black lambswool Donegal tweed cap made in County Tipperary, Ireland by John Hanly & Co. Ltd. I bought it at a deep, deep discount (75%) from BBC America, size XL (my usual Euro size, and often my USA hat size... I wear a 7-1/2 to 7-5/8 hat, 60-61 centimeters).

This hat was listed online as an XL. Inside the cap, it says; 7-5/8, 62, XL. It's a 62 centimeter, and just a tad too large for the pumpkin atop my neck stem. But I like it, it's soft and warm without being too heavy, and a needle and thread should take up the slack.