When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: elegant sunday hats images for men

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Chaperon (headgear) - Wikipedia

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

    Chaperon is a diminutive of chape, which derives, like the English cap, cape and cope, from the Late Latin cappa, which already could mean cap, cape or hood ().. The tail of the hood, often quite long, was called the tippit [2] or liripipe in English, and liripipe or cornette in French.

  3. Morning dress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morning_dress

    The correct hat would be a formal top hat, or if on less spacious audience settings, optionally a collapsible equivalent opera hat. Debrett's states, that morning dress should not be specified as the dress code for events starting after 6 p.m. If a formal event will commence at or after 6 p.m., a white tie should be specified instead.

  4. 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.

  5. List of hat styles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hat_styles

    A hat which shades the face and shoulders from the sun. Tam o' Shanter: A Scottish wool hat originally worn by men. Taqiyah: A round fabric cap worn by Muslim men. Tengkolok: A traditional Malay, Indonesian and Bruneian male headwear. It is made from long songket cloth folded and tied in particular style (solek). Top hat

  6. 1650–1700 in Western fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1650–1700_in_Western_fashion

    Hats with very tall crowns, derived from the earlier capotain but with flat crowns, were popular until the end of the 1650s. The brims varied as well. Hats were decorated with feathers. By the 1660s, a very small hat with a very low crown, little brim, and large amount of feathers was popular among the French courtiers.

  7. Coppola cap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coppola_cap

    Coppola caps. The coppola (Italian pronunciation:) is a traditional kind of flat cap typically worn in Sicily, Campania and Calabria, where is it known as còppula or birritta, and also seen in Malta, Greece (where it is known as tragiáska, Greek: τραγιάσκα), some territories in Turkey, Corsica, and Sardinia (where it came to be known, in the local language, as berritta, cicía, and ...