....and it's quite sad (and probably temporary - what can I say? I'm an addict). I was trying to look up various hats in order to comment on my brother's blog post. I needed to make sure that my instinct about the appropriate hat to wear with tweeds in the country was correct. I thought it was probably a fedora or a trilby but I wasn't sure if a homburg was actually the one I meant (but homburgs are more formal - like a banker or prime minister might wear). This may not seem very important, but there is always the possibility that some chappish troll might challenge my choice of lid, and an ugly incident like this might occur (ridiculous argument in those comments - akubra my foot. It's obviously a fedora).
Anyway, where does wikipedia come into this story? Well, naturally I looked there first. I searched men's hats, as I have done many times in the past, and eventually came to this "list of headgear". Well, it was a start. I found the hats I wanted, read the pitifully short articles, and then found the answers I needed on artofmanliness.com.
The problem is this: Look at the headings for the list of hats. It starts out by showing all the kinds of hats that aren't worn anymore, then a bit of a list of hats, then more hats that aren't worn anymore (which is a trend that needs to stop). Then it goes into specialty hats. But this is not how wikipedia used to handle hats. Before they had, in almost every entry on men's hats, a discussion of how formal they were, giving good, meaningful comparisons across class, era, setting, and time of day. It was very helpful to know that a homburg is between a top hat and a fedora, but top hats are rarely worn during the day except at weddings and Ascot (morning dress occasions). It was helpful to me to know Morning Dress is the equivalent of White Tie, and Stroller is the equivalaent of Black Tie. But what if one is in the country? In the daytime? The evening? What would one go Bunburying off to a country manor in, while driving a Bentley and guzzling Grey Poupon? (It is awesome that it accepts "Bunburying" as a word without underlining it in red)
Wikipedia used to run down every possible combo. It was lovely, as a writer who likes dandyish characters, to be able to pinpoint the exact level of rakishness I needed. Now it's all dumbed down. Lame. The article for Stroller style still has a bit of what I was looking for.
Hmm. It occurs to me that a tweed flat cap might not be amiss...... What would the 11th Doctor wear? No, never mind - that would be a fez.
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Fear not, ane-ue-dono! For you can click the "history" tab of Wikipedia articles and find older versions; it takes a little digging, but you can find a version prior to the infliction of any folly that has you troubled!
ReplyDeleteAnd that comment thread fills me with rage; anyone who thinks a Stetson is a fedora has forfeited his stepfatherin' eyes. A Stetson is, well, a stiffened Homburg with a very wide brim, I guess? A Stetson is a Stetson, basically, let's be all anime-existentialist here.
PS. Though level of formality is actually constant throughout Europe (White Tie>Black Tie, for instance), how that formality maps vs. location and time of day varies by locale. Generally England, Germany, and Scandinavia use one system (the one where evening=formal; it has been theorized that it's a plutocratic tradition common to Protestants), while France, Italy, and Spain use another (formality depends solely on the occasion, basically).
PPS. "Stepfatherin'" is an epithet I came up with just now. It's "mother F'in" for polite company.