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  2. Bollenhut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bollenhut

    Woman in the Black Forest, around 1900 Ludovico Wolfgang Hart, Three Girls of Gutach, 1864 Théodore Valerio, Couple of Hornberg, 1841. A Bollenhut (German: [ˈbɔlənˌhuːt], literally "ball-hat") is a formal headdress with distinctive woollen pompoms worn since c. 1750 by Protestant women as part of their folk costume or Tracht in the three adjoining Black Forest villages of Gutach ...

  3. List of hat styles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hat_styles

    Hardee hat: Also known as the 1858 Dress Hat. Regulation hat for Union soldiers during the American Civil War. Hennin: A woman's hat of the Middle Ages. [36] This style includes the conical "princess" hats sometimes seen in illustrations of folk-tale princesses. Homburg: A semi-formal hat with a medium brim and crown with a crease and no dents.

  4. Welsh hat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_hat

    The hat may have developed from a number of types of tall hat including the riding hat, which ladies wore during the early part of the 19th century, (as illustrated in the Llanover prints) but no evidence has been discovered which explains why, during the 1830s, the tall hat with the stiff, flat brim, which is unique to the Welsh hat, replaced ...

  5. Hennin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hennin

    A conical hennin with black velvet lappets (brim) and a sheer veil, 1485–90. The hennin (French: hennin / ˈ h ɛ n ɪ n /; [1] possibly from Flemish Dutch: henninck meaning cock or rooster) [N 1] was a headdress in the shape of a cone, steeple, or truncated cone worn in the Late Middle Ages by European women of the nobility. [2]

  6. Capotain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capotain

    A capotain, capatain, copotain, or steeple hat is a tall-crowned, narrow-brimmed, slightly conical "sugarloaf" hat, usually black, worn by men and women from the 1590s into the mid-seventeenth century in England and northwestern Europe. Earlier capotains had rounded crowns; later, the crown was flat at the top.

  7. Bonnet (headgear) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonnet_(headgear)

    As hats came back into style, bonnets were increasingly worn by women who wanted to appear modest in public, with the result that bonnets accumulated connotations of dowager wear and were dropped from fashion, except out on the prairies or country wear. The Gleaners, by Jean-François Millet, 1857: a cloth bonnet substitutes for a head kerchief