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A Man’s Guide To WEARING ​ ​ Presented by Real Men Real Style ​

REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Copyright, Legal Notice and Disclaimer

This publication is protected under the US Copyright Act of 1976 and all other applicable international, federal, state and local laws, and all rights are reserved, including resale rights: you are not allowed to give or sell this Guide to anyone else.

Please note that much of this publication is based on personal experience and anecdotal evidence.

Although the author and publisher have made every reasonable attempt to achieve complete accuracy of the content in this Guide, they assume no responsibility for errors or omissions.

Also, you should use this information as you see fit, and at your own risk.

Your particular situation may not be exactly suited to the examples illustrated here; in fact, it's likely that they won't be the same, and you should adjust your use of the information and recommendations accordingly.

Any trademarks, service marks, product names or named features are assumed to be the property of their respective owners, and are used only for reference.

There is no implied endorsement if we use one of these terms.

Finally, use your head. Nothing in this Guide is intended to replace common sense, legal, medical or other professional advice, and is meant to inform and entertain the reader.

So have fun and learn to sharp!

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Contents

Chapter 1: Why Should A Man Wear A 4 Why a Hat? 4 Defining a “Classic” Hat 5

Chapter 2: Choosing A Hat 6 Material 6 Shape 7 Size 7 Budget 8

Chapter 3: Classic Hat Styles 9 9 Homburg 10 Porkpie 10 Bowler/Derby 10 Western Hats 10 Panama Hats 11 11 Hats 12

Chapter 4. What To Wear With A Hat 13 Caring for a Hat 14

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Introduction

The hat is a classic menswear piece that has fallen out of style over the last 50 years.

That's too bad.

Hats are:

Functional.

A hat protects you from the elements, make you look taller, send a visual message of societal position, and cover imperfections of the upper head. It works to help you feel and look better!

Timelessly stylish.

For thousands of years they have been the calling card of the type of men who wore them. Can you imagine a cowboy without his hat? What about a Marine without his cover? A Greek fisherman without his ? A Russian without his ?

In this eBook, I show you how why you should wear a hat, what hat is best for you and finally what to wear with your hat.

Sincerely

Antonio Centeno Founder, Real Men Real Style

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Chapter 1: Why Should A Man Wear A Hat

Ignore, for a moment, the changing winds of .

Classic hats — the kinds of hats our grandfathers used to wear — have had their ups and downs in .

Sometimes they’re in, sometimes they’re out; sometimes they’re co- opted by a particular entertainer or subculture.

None of that matters much.

If you want to wear a hat, wear a hat.

They’re comfortable, practical, and a good way to add a touch of personal style to your outfit.

A high-quality hat is a fantastic addition to any man’s . That said — if you’re going to wear a hat, wear one well.

Why a Hat? Hats aren’t a mandatory piece of men’s clothing. They never have been, really. People may speak fondly of “the days when men wore hats,” usually meaning the 1940s through the 1960s or so, but it wasn’t required.

The reason you see so many men in old photographs wearing hats is that it was comfortable and convenient for them. Clothes weren’t waterproof, buildings weren’t climate-controlled, and sunscreen didn’t exist.

A sturdy piece of wool that could stand up to the battering of the elements was a nice thing for a man to have on his head.

These days, we have a much more comfortable lifestyle, and if we need weather protection we can invest in serious sporting wear. That leaves classically styled hats in the realm of accent pieces: optional clothing to express your personal style.

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Hats are mostly worn outdoors. That means the accent is going to be dressing up your outerwear more than your other clothes — nice if you’ve got a fairly bland looking or and you want a little more pop to your look.

Of course, they can be worn in the summer too, at which point they’ll be dressing up your lightweight , , and slacks.

Defining a “Classic” Hat Remember, for most of the history of men’s style, hats were functional articles of clothing. They needed to look good, but they also needed to keep off sun, rain, and wind.

From those practical necessities, we get the classic style of men’s hat.

Don’t get too hung up on details here, but broadly speaking a “classic” men’s hat refers to the stiff-sided, structured styles popular in the middle 20th century.

Most share the same basic elements, in different angles and proportions:

material (typically wool) ● A stiff ● A circular brim ● A band or around the base of the crown

Different styles of hats are usually nothing more than variations in the sizes and shapes of the brim and crown.

There are a few outliers (soft flat , for example), but most classic hat styles fall into the stiff-sided felt family.

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Chapter 2: Choosing A Hat

There are a few factors that go into finding the perfect hat. Everyone’s needs are different, and you’ll want to choose the hat that’s right for your look and your budget.

Material Most classic hats are made from felt, a condensed mat of tough fibers. Wool is the most common material, and by most standards the best.

It is tough, warm, and breathable, and it keeps its shape well. The quality of the wool used affects the texture and durability of felt hats.

An ideal hat should feel soft against the hand, with a bit of a fuzzy knap, and it should keep its shape but bend easily under pressure.

A slick, hardened surface or a brittle stiffness is a sign of cheap construction.

A few classic styles of hat use non-felt materials:

Panama hats are woven from straw, and there are several other styles of straw hats as well, and flat caps are usually made from a woven wool cloth like .

Another alternative to wool is felt, which can be made from nearly any kind of .

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

The hair of and other small, aquatic mammals are still used for luxury hat , and cow and horse hair are used in tougher, more rugged styles, especially Western hats.

Shape You want the shape of your hat to balance your face.

In this context, “balance” means the hat should help bring out the facial features that need strengthening and de-emphasize the ones that are already strong.

So, for example, a very round-faced man is going to look better in a hat that tapers to a peak at the crown, like a sharply-angled or trilby.

A man who thinks of himself as very angular in feature, on the other hand, benefits from something that will round him out, like a pork pie or a bowler.

Most men don’t fall neatly into obvious extremes like that, of course. Expect it to take you a while in front of a mirror with lots of options to try on before you figure out what’s perfect for your face.

But if you’re starting with something that adds some curves or angles that you don’t already possess, you’re probably on the right track.

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Keep in mind that brims are malleable, to some degree.

A fedora with the brim tilted down all the way around gives your face a different shape than one flipped rakishly up on one side.

So you’ve got options here — but the shape of the hat should definitely be one of your main considerations when you’re buying.

Size Hat size is easy to measure, if you’ve got a soft, flexible measuring tape.

You can buy one at any craft or fabric store, and of course most hat shops and tailors will have them on hand.

You can also use a piece of string, and then measure the string against a ruler.

Measure the circumference of your head where you want your hat’s inside rim to sit.

Generally speaking, that should be just above the tips of your ears.

A little higher will give you a tight fit; a little lower will be loose enough to potentially rest on your ears.

Most manufacturers will have their own sizing charts to convert inches to hat sizes.

As a loose rule of thumb, though, you can use the following benchmarks:

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Budget Be realistic about buying a quality hat. It’s like a or a dress — you’re not going to pick one up at Target for twenty bucks.

Plan on dropping upwards of $50 at the very minimum for a basic wool felt hat.

For high-quality wool or fancy construction, it’ll be up into the three digits.

That’s not a bad investment. Well-made hats will last several lifetimes.

In terms of dollars-per-wear, a real wool felt hat from a reliable manufacturer might be one of the highest-value items you ever purchase.

Look for deals where you can get them, absolutely. Sales or coupons are your friends here. But look for quality hats from brands that specialize in headwear, and don’t make the price point your determining factor.

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Chapter 3: Classic Hat Styles

Down into the nitty gritty! Do you know your homburgs from your pork pies? If not, don’t sweat it. We’ve got all the specifics here.

Fedora This is what most people think about when they think of classic men’s hats. It’s such an iconic style that low-grade manufacturers will call just about anything with a brim and a fixed crown a “fedora,” regardless of accuracy.

For the purist, though, a fedora is a felt hat with pinched sides and a lengthwise crease down the crown.

That gives the front a roughly wedge-like shape, though it can be molded to the wearer’s taste.

One of the big advantages of a fedora — and one of the reasons for the style’s widespread popularity — is the wide, flexible brim.

Fedora brims are flat, with no constructed edge or curl, and can be bent up or down as the wearer pleases.

The flexible brim gives the fedora a little more versatility than a stiffer style.

Trilby A trilby is little more than a shortened, angular fedora (and is sometimes called a “crumpled fedora,” although the term is old- fashioned these days). It has the same crown shape as a fedora, but the back is shorter than the front, creating an angle.

Trilbys are typically worn with the brim snapped downward in front and upward in back, adding to the impression of a narrowing angle at the back of the hat.

The brim is smaller than on a fedora, usually only an inch or so wide.

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

The style dates back to the turn of the 20th century, but in the 21st century it saw a revival as a youth style, particularly in music culture.

Homburg The fedora’s dressier cousin, the homburg is your best bet for a formal business look.

It has the same creased crown, but without the pinches at the sides, and the brim is stiffer and has a slightly upturned lip all the way around.

This is still the go-to dress hat of businessmen, politicians, and other well-to-do gentlemen in the .

Porkpie A shorter style (and therefore a good one for men who are already tall), a porkpie has a flattened top without a crease down the center.

It is pinched at the sides like a fedora, creating a slightly triangular or wedge-shaped front. The brim is usually small, and turned up around the edge.

Bowler/Derby The two names mean the same thing: a stiff, rounded dome of a crown with no creasing or pinching, and a short brim curled up at the sides.

Pop culture has made the into a stuffy British icon, but its origins are working-class, and it is considered less formal than styles like the homburg and the fedora.

Are You Ready to Take Action? ​ ​ ​ Click here to get your Free Style Consultation with me! ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Western Hats Broadly speaking, Western hats are high-crowned, wide-brimmed hats.

The most common style have a “double crown,” where the felt is stiffened with a crease down the center and a dimple on either side of the crown, but other shapes are possible as well.

The origins of the style are practical, but these days fine felt cowboy hats (with the brand leading the way) are just as much a fashion piece as anything else.

They are somewhat more “macho” and less formal than other styles.

Panama Hats Confusingly, Panama hats come from (they were shipped to Panama to be sold to sailors and workers on the Panama Canal in the early 20th century, and the name stuck).

The weaving is an art form, and true Panama hats cost hundreds or even thousands of dollars — and they’re well worth the price for men in hot, humid climates.

Most Panama hats are shaped like or trilbys, but they are made from woven palm leaves or straw instead of felt.

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

The flexible weave can be crumpled or rolled up and still retain its shape, and unlike most straw hats it can endure many soakings and dryings without distorting in shape.

Panama hats are slightly more relaxed than their felt counterparts, but that makes them ideally suited to the lightweight styles and loosened formality of tropical climates.

Boater Flat-topped straw hats with a wide brim, are mostly novelty items these days, but are still considered appropriate (and desirable) attire for rowing and regatta events. Many barbershop quartets wear them, as well.

While you won’t usually see them outside those settings, they are technically still a perfectly acceptable summer alternative to a fedora or a homburg. If you want to wear one with a summer suit, more power to you.

Top Hats The only modern use for a (outside of costuming) is as the accompaniment to or .

Morning dress, the daytime formal standard, calls for a light-colored hat (usually dove gray), while white tie, worn at night, calls for a black hat.

Unless you happen to attend a lot of formal events, or you need a top hat professionally (as with some coach drivers), it’s probably not worth investing in one.

Click here to a quick video about the classic hat styles. ​ ​

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Chapter 4. What To Wear With A Hat

It’s worth noting that not all outfits are suited to fine felt hats.

If you happen across the phrase “fedora guy” or “fedora wearer” on modern social media, it’s not a compliment.

The implication is a sketchy guy who wears the same ratty fedora with every outfit because he thinks it makes him look classy.

Don’t be that guy.

Dress hats should be worn with dress outfits.

Suits are always safe. and nice slacks are probably fine too.

Sports jackets can work, but keep them on the nicer and less “thrift store” looking side of things. Wool are fine.

Once you get into the realm of blue , however, even nice ones, or of practical working clothes like barn and plaid hunting jackets, you need to step your down a notch as well. T- shirts are right out.

Save the fine felt fedoras, homburgs, and pork pies for when you’re dressed well.

Western hats, straw hats, and derbies have a little more flexibility, and can be worn with less dressy outfits.

Trendy pieces like the brightly-colored trilbys that were in fashion a few years back are more flexible, and can be worn without classic menswear accompanying them, but of course the converse is also true: you shouldn’t wear them with your good or overcoats.

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

Caring for a Hat Felt hats are sturdy, but the material requires specific care and treatment.

You should always handle hats by the brim, not the crown.

Use your hands to shape the crown when you first buy the hat, if you have to (or better still, have the manufacturer shape it to your specifications), but after that keep your hands away from the crown, especially where it creases.

Dirt and oil from your hands can weaken the fabric, and the creases are the points that will wear through first.

When a felt hat gets wet, set it down flat on a towel and let it air-dry naturally.

Heating a wet hat with a hair dryer, radiator, or other heat source can warp its shape.

Your hat should have a sweatband on the inner edge, and the name tells you what it’s for: when it soaks through with sweat, take the hat off and turn the sweatband inside out, so that it can air dry without soaking into the felt.

Every few wears, give your hat a light brushing with a suit brush. That will get rid of loose dirt and other gritty particles that can eat their way into the felt and wear it away.

If you get a dirty smudge or other stain, wipe very lightly with a damp cloth, or pat the stain with a gum eraser to pull it up without damaging the felt.

For storage, a dry box with a frame for the hat to rest on is best.

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REAL MEN REAL STYLE A Man’s Guide To Wearing Hats

If you’re not quite willing to shell out for an individual box for each of your hats, use a large wall hook, but cut a slit in a tennis and it over the hook so that your hat isn’t hanging on a single point.

Felt has “memory,” and if you leave it too long on anything that applies pressure (like a small hook), it will bend into that shape.

The best way to keep a hat in its proper shape is simply to wear it!

If your hats are seeing a good, regular rotation of use, they should do just fine.

If they ever need to lie idle for a while, switch between hooks, boxes, or storage on flat shelves, so that they’re never resting on the same part of the hat for too long.

With proper care, a felt hat is an investment that won’t just last for your lifetime — it’ll last for someone else’s lifetime after you’re dead and gone.

Want some tips on wearing hats? Click here to watch. ​ ​

- The End -

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