Monday, August 28, 2006

Goodies for all cyclists wearing their helmets

Local News - Peterborough Today: News, Sport, Jobs, Property, Cars, Entertainments & More:

"SAFETY-conscious cyclists who wear crash helmets while peddling around Peterborough are being rewarded with goodie bags.
Bike riders are being given treats to celebrate Helmet Watch 2006 – a drive to encourage more people to wear life-saving headgear.

The move comes after 92 cyclists were injured on Peterborough roads last year, including 19 children aged 15 and under.

Cyclists spotted wearing helmets have been given free key rings combining a torch and a whistle, and have also been entered into a prize draw with the chance to scoop a new bike and a family holiday at Center Parcs.

Street wardens, road safety officers and police community support officers have been targeting cyclists in the city centre in a bid to promote better safety.

Peterborough City Council road safety officer Clair George said: “Most cycle injuries are suffered by teenagers or young adults, many of whom are not wearing a helmet because they feel it made them look un-cool.

“Cycling is a fun, enjoyable, healthy and convenient means of transport and Peterborough has an excellent cycle network.

“While a cycle helmet will not prevent a crash from occurring, wearing one does reduce the severity of injury if you fall off.”

Road safety officers have advised all cyclists to wear helmets.

Bike riders are also advised to look after helmets and resist the urge to personalise them with stickers and glue, which can weaken helmets.

Helmets should only ever be cleaned using a soft cloth and water. And helmets which are damaged or hit in crashes should be replaced immediately.

The Helmet Watch initiative is set to continue over the next two weeks and road safety officers will be on hand to offer advice to cyclists.
"

Plummet spell appeared strange and weird

Canada : Plummet spell appeared strange and weird - Textile Fashion News Fibre2Fashion:

"In the fall fashion season there were the headgear, winged headdresses, netted, caged faces, big, brooding fedoras, hoods, veils and riding helmets.

Stylists have been indicating an era of covered-up, modest dress since at least last fall.

The trend marks a new clear-headedness which might actually take hold.

Scanty tops have already lengthened and are better to balance with skinny jeans.

Style skirt suits are back to a time of feminine modesty and composure.

Another significant change on the style scene is shape shifting.

The most dramatic theme of the season is a brooding darkness with black, grey, khaki or purple.

This season is very much about covering up from head to toe, as it's all about shape, proportion and understated luxury as it's a very forgiving season.

Several designers seemed to have designer touch of avian fever since it's commonplace for runway models to wear unusual headgear.

This season, the coverings included a golden veil, fearsome studded black masks, oversized knitted turbans, black and gold face cages, witch hats, knitted full head coverings and hide-and-seek hoods.

Riding helmets also appeared and they're now cropping up in fashion spreads everywhere. "


Kate Moss Is Named Top Hat Wearer

Congratulations, Kate!

Kate Moss Is Named Top Hat Wearer - UK News Headlines:

"Kate Moss is well 'ahead' of the rest in the latest fashion trend... the celebrity hat.

No self respecting star is without one these days and colourful Kate beat Princess Michael of Kent in a survey to find the best wearers.

Singer Robbie Williams came first in the men's list followed by the Prince of Wales.

Joanna Lumley and David Beckham take the third position in the respective lists compiled by Luton's millinery industry with Dawn French and Sir Sean Connery next, and then Baroness Thatcher and Jonathan Ross.

Philip Wright, of the town's millers Walter Wright Ltd, said hats were an important element of the fashion wardrobe.

He said: 'A hat is the final statement in personal style and to be recognised as one of the nation's most stylish hat wearers is an accolade for individuality and distinction.'

Tony Edwards, of Luton First which carried out the poll of 2,000 people, said that Kate Moss was a worthy style icon for hats.

He said: 'Kate manages to wear the most elaborate and extravagant millinery designs with great confidence and aplomb and, most importantly, without the hat seemingly wearing her.

'She has the face to launch a thousand hat collections and has done much to promote hat wearing in Europe in recent years.'

Robbie Williams, who tops the male chart, is described as a fun fashion fan who obviously like to 'dress up'.

Mr Edwards added: 'He does not take fashion too seriously and appears to treat clothes as a bit of fun.

'His recent recordings of early 1950's hits provided the excuse to wear 'Rat Pack' suits of the period and, of course, the Sinatra hat - now very much back in fashion.'

Angela Cummins, who runs The Hat Box in Luton selling Luton-made headwear, believes women should choose a hat carefully and then wear it with caution.

She said: 'It is important to find a hat which suits your face but so much more important to wear it with confidence.

'Celebrity hat wearers tend to remember the golden rule not to tilt the brim down at the front, covering the forehead and often restricting vision.

'Best always to keep a level brim, your head up, and to walk with supreme confidence that you look great. But try not to let the hat wear you.'

Top Celebrity Hat Wearers’

Women

1. Kate Moss
2. Princess Michael of Kent
3. Joanna Lumley
4. Dawn French
5. Baroness Thatcher

Men

1. Robbie Williams
2. The Prince Of Wales
3. David Beckham
4. Sir Sean Connery
5. Jonathan Ross"


Saturday, August 26, 2006

Uganda: Who Let The Goats Out?

Spreading a tradition. Without a horse.

allAfrica.com: Uganda: Who Let the Goats Out?:

"The event expanded and was eventually turned into a full day activity modelled on the famous Royal Ascot Horse Races in England. In came the trimming and all, the fashion and the hat culture.

Fashion

It is now about dressing to impress, a black tie affair for men and the impressive hats and occasional dress for women as well as men.

'The fashion has been getting better and better over the years. We really want people to make an effort to dress appropriately for the occasion. In the beginning it was worse, it was mainly jeans but that is changing,' says Griffin.

Suddenly Ugandans are catching up and taking fashion at the races at a higher level. The prizes from best-dressed and best hats also help put those attending in the mood of dressing appropriately just in case they are announced winners."


Ladies Break All Ebor Records

Ladies Break All Ebor Records (from York Press):

"James Brennan, of York racecourse, said: 'Ladies Day has increasingly become one of the busiest days of the past few years. It's a great day out. It's great to get this huge amount of people. It was great to see the sunshine come out for the final day of the festival.'

Black and white was a strong theme among the fashionistas in the crowded champagne bars. Hot colours such as fuchsia pink, turquoise blue and emerald green also made their mark.

Big hats made a comeback, with one woman reportedly splashing out �900 for her feather headdress.

But Lisa Shackleton, of Skipton, wearing a bright blue dress and matching straw hat, proved you don't need to break the bank to look a million dollars.

She said: 'I got my dress from Primark for a tenner, and I made my own hat for four quid.'

Women flocked to York from all over the country for Ladies Day. Anna Heathcote, of York, was joined by friends Kathryn France, from Lancashire, and Julie Monks, from Glasgow.

Kathryn said: 'We all come every year. We did Ascot, but it wasn't a patch on York. The atmosphere here is just one big party and everyone talks to each other.'

Anna said: 'The course is fabulous and so are the facilities. It's great to see all the outfits. You don't get much opportunity to wear a hat these days.'

"

No hats about it

What is the most popular baseball cap today? Read on ...

No hats about it:

"CHICAGO - Tiger Woods, Spike Lee, Leonardo DiCaprio, disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff and, of course, fans and players all have one thing in common: They're usually sporting baseball caps.

Sure, their lids may make for a stylish signature, but in a fickle, fast-paced fashion world, can the cap really keep up?

'There's a time and place for a baseball cap - which is on a baseball field or in the stands,' said Glenn O'Brien, GQ's Style Guy and blogger at men.style.com/gq/blogs/styleguy .

Yet a recent trip down Michigan Avenue proved that the public likes to wear the cap even without a steaming, overpriced hot dog in hand.

Glenn Campbell, co-founder and chief operating officer of Hat World Inc., the Indianapolis-based parent company of baseball cap emporium Lids, takes the perspective of those sporting a cap: 'No matter where you're at, wear a hat.'

As the owner of 500 baseball caps, Campbell's philosophy is one for daily couture: 'For men it's an accessory, kind of like a women's purse.'

But where Campbell sees style, O'Brien finds fan loyalty. 'People like to demonstrate where they're from or who they like.'
"

Hat Hiring Shop is Ahead of the Rest

Only in Britain. Pity!

Features - Warwick Today: News, Sport, Jobs, Property, Cars, Entertainments & More:

"Hats off to two sisters who fancied a change and have taken over a business hiring out headgear for special occasions.

Erica Smith, a director and company secretary from Long Itchington, and her sister Pam Goddard, a pharmacist from Lillington, have taken on a franchise and are now trading as Felicity Hat Hire in Regent Street, Leamington.

They have 500 hats to choose from and can also provide accessories such as silk scarves and handbags.

So far, they have served ladies going to the Queen's garden party and Glorious Goodwood, as well as weddings and graduations.

Pam said: 'The reason we think a hat hire shop is a good idea is that many women buy a hat as a one-off purchase but it then lands up in a charity shop.

'Lots of high street hats are OK but nothing like the designer hats or the hats we buy. Most women only wear hats for special occasions and spend a reasonable amount of money on their outfits. They may well wear the outfit, shoes and bag again but they are unlikely to wear the hat. That's where we come in. With a wide range of styles and colours, we can usually find a hat.

'We ask customers to bring along their outfits so we can get the colours right. The hire is for four or five days so there is no panic to return them.

'We aim to have evening events at the shop when people can come along and try on hats. If people need catering for events or advice on outfits we can advise them where to go.'"


Knockoff Riding Hat

Anyone want to look dorky, too? Read on ...

globeandmail.com : RIDING HAT:

"The equestrian fetish has been hanging about a couple of seasons now. Me, I always preferred boys to horses, so I admit I don't get the appeal. A nice pair of riding boots, sure, love 'em, except for the fact that you can't walk very far in them without savaging the top of your foot. Some snug jodhpurs, a lovely nipped burgundy velvet jacket -- these are delicious fashion staples. But once you get to the helmet, or the riding crop, then you've officially become as goofy as Madonna rolling about a stable in a fashion spread trying to get a career lift off the back of a beast.

With this canter, the fashion industry has officially descended into madness. Some designer (Nicholas Ghesqui�re for Balenciaga, http://www.balenciaga.com) sends teenagers down his runway with show-jumping helmets on, and we the captive audience actually consider buying a knockoff for ourselves?"


Red Hat Gals tour Glacier Park

Find out more about this local group in the article.

Liberty County Times Online - News:

"Recently, eleven members of the Red Hat group from Chester motored to Rising Sun via the senior bus where they boarded one of the famous Red Bus Jammers for a tour called Crown of the Continent which travelled over Going to the Sun Highway to Lake McDonald. Although weather reports predicted rain and cold, the ladies continued on a planned outing wearing layers of clothing and of course, their red hats and purple garments."


Sisters pass the hats for newborn caps

Can you help them surpass their goal? Read the rest of the article to find out how.

Beacon Journal | 08/24/2006 | Sisters pass the hat for newborn caps:

"They collect caps, seek knitters, funds

Alexandra and Elizabeth Wainwright know they can't save the 4 million newborns who die every year worldwide. But they're out to save some of them.

The West Akron sisters have started a campaign to collect knitted and crocheted caps for infants, simple items that can prevent the newborns from losing vital body heat. They plan to send the caps to the U.S.-based Save the Children, which will distribute them in other countries through its Caps to the Capital program.

It was a Save the Children report that spurred Elizabeth and Alexandra to act. The girls, ages 11 and 7, respectively, had read a brief article about the report in the Beacon Journal in May and were dismayed to learn that such an uncomplicated remedy was out of reach for so many.

``It's a simple thing. It's a cap,'' Elizabeth said.

So far, the girls have collected more than 100 caps, with another 100 promised. Their goal is to collect 250 hats small enough for premature or full-term newborns before the Jan. 2 deadline.

``The scary thing,'' Elizabeth said, ``is I can hardly knit.''

``I can knit, but I just can knit straight,'' Alexandra added, holding up a simple knitted strip to prove her point."


Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Hats off to the ladies

Newbury Today | Hats off to the ladies:

"SOME Jekyll and Hyde weather couldn’t ruin Ladies Day at Newbury Racecourse on Saturday.
Alongside the races there were prizes for the best-dressed ladies. Despite many well-turned-out entrants from London, it was Reading’s women that scooped a one-two in the fashion stakes.
Jane Lunnon won the best dressed competition. She received a host of prizes, including �300 of Planet Clothing vouchers and a beauty day for two at the new Donnington Valley Hotel Spa, which opens next month.
Of course, Ladies Day is all about the hats. Although the sheer number of headdresses may have declined this year, there were still enough to create a difficult decision for the judges.
Sue Dines won the best hat award, and picked up a �200 Jacques Vert voucher, as well as a �100 Graham McCartney hat voucher.
The major race for the day was the Hungerford Stakes, which was won by Welsh Emperor, who led form start to finish.

To view video from Ladies Day, and see if you were caught on camera, click the video link at the top of this story.
"

If Susan can't turn heads... I'll eat my hat!

Congratulations, Susan! The hat picture shouldn't be missed.

News - Leeds Today: News, Sport, Jobs, Property, Cars, Entertainments & More:

"CREATING an elegant bread-themed hat for upper-crust ladies to wear to a day at the races was certainly no picnic.

But mature student Susan Bradshaw has used her loaf and put together the perfect posh head gear to earn her first place in a prestigious local design competition.
Susan, who is studying a HNC in Millinery at Leeds College of Art and Design, entered the competition sponsored by West Yorkshire bakers Warburtons. The hat will be worn on Ladies Day at York's Ebor Festival on Thursday.

Susan, from Bridlington, said: 'I heard about the competition through my course tutor. The hat had to be fun and different and to promote the healthy, family image of a picnic. So I put together a couple of designs and just sent them off.'

After being picked as the winner, the delighted designer than had just over two weeks to bring her creation to life.

Pride
She said: 'The deadlines were tight and it was hard work but it was fun and I really enjoyed the challenge. I was ecstatic and so proud to find out I'd won and I'm really happy with the end product– I'm just praying for good weather at the race meeting!'

Susan's winning design is made from a gold coloured basket filled with wheat, poppies, butterflies, a blanket and real varnished bread rolls.

The design will become a permanent exhibit at the Warburton's visitor's centre at the company's depot in Normanton."


Sunday, August 20, 2006

Paul Norman's flair for fashion

Jamaica Gleaner News - Paul Norman's flair for fashion - Sunday | August 20, 2006:

"When Paul Norman examines a woman from head to toe, it is not likely to be for the usual reasons. The 43-year-old assistant sales and marketing manager is also a milliner - a seller and designer of gorgeous hats that often leave hat-lovers giddy with desire. It's a sideline which contrasts oddly with his weekday occupation.

Norman's normal work-day world is the place where visitors to Jamaica will find that there is much more to do than relaxing on the beach in the days and soaking up music and pina coladas at night.

Instead, the marketing rep of Chukka Caribbean Adventure has been inciting visitors, to live dangerously. At Chukka Blue, visitors and locals alike go river tubing over White Water rapids, do canopy tours in which they rappel hundreds of feet above ground - Tarzan-like - over north coast rain forests. They also ride and swim with horses in the ocean and participate in jeep safari tours.

At James Bond Beach in St. Mary, there is also 'Sting Ray City' where holidayers discover that they can kiss the creatures.

But, when he is away from the job, Norman leads a life defined not by a craving for adventure, but by a passion for music, for church and for fashion; in that order.

Hat making, he states, was a career he 'came upon' shortly after his honeymoon.

A special hat for a new outfit

'In 1987,' he recalls, ' I had just got married to my wife Sheila and I wanted a special hat for a new outfit for her. She loves hats because she grew up in the Pentecostal church where they are always worn.'

What she finally got was one which Norman decorated himself - a stunning creation of royal blue.

He notes: 'The ladies at our church all wear hats. The Pentecostals wear no bracelets, no chains. Instead, the hat is used as the accessory to make a statement.'

His church was a captive market and, soon enough, his skill at finding the right hat was in demand. At his church - Calvary Tabernacle United Pentecostal Church in St. Ann's Bay - there is always an event - crusades, conventions, weddings - and so his hats are always needed.

Norman sets himself to sourcing, buying and even decorating them himself. A business was born.

Later, he discovered that his great-grandmother and grandfather from St. Elizabeth were milliners too. After creating a hat for his aunt to wear to her 50th wedding anniversary celebrations, she told him that it was good that he was continuing the family tradition. His great-grandparents were milliners who worked with jippy jappa (a type of straw), his aunt told him.

Today, Norman says, 'I will take up a hat and right away I know what should go on it.'

When he began his business, he recalls that local hats were very basic with little style or flair. 'The hats (available) were not hats that I would have bought to give my wife as a gift.'

So, he turned his hand to designing them himself. Memorable pieces, he recalls, include one black with a gold band and another cream affair accented with gold and a large, cream rose. Yet another was a red had with a rolled rim and a large red rose.

'Those were out of my first collection and they were the best. They were different from what was in the stores. I was not into copying.'

For five years, Norman's first store was located in St. Ann's Bay at 64 Main Street before moving to Ocho Rios. The store is now located in Island Plaza in that town.

Flair for the dramatic

Norman often goes for the dramatic in his creations. He believes, however, that his most outstanding design was a gold hat done for a Justice of the Peace. It was flamboyant and turned her into the 'belle of the ball'.

Instinctively, he knows which hat will make every one look at a woman twice. 'The face, the height and shape, in addition to the personality determine the kind of hat which suits you.

'The hat never goes out of fashion,' he declares."


The Gossipy Gal Pal takes her hat off to the fedora!

Rogers Yahoo! Hi-Speed Internet Spotlight Daily Dish:

"Once upon a time in the land of gangsters, cool cats, Bogey and Old Blue Eyes, the fedora was the very height of fashion.

Any Rat worth their Pack could be found sporting the folded felt version that first came to be in the late 1800s, but really caught its stride when Al Capone decided to make the distinguished head-gear an official part of the mafia uniform (I guess sombreros aren't exactly inconspicuous).

So yes, there was definitely a day when fedoras were part of any hip wardrobe, but the bigger question is: Are they still a hot hat today?

Not according to my esteemed colleague and good friend The Dish, who noted in a recent column that, 'It is generally not acceptable for men over the age of 24 to ever wear a fedora or even think about wearing a fedora, even in Hollywood.'

Now, it is not in my gossipy character to question the almighty Dish, but can this type of definitive statement really be made about such a multi-functional accessory? Does the 'men over 24' rule mean us ladies can sport the fedora? And seriously Dish -- what about Indiana Jones (don't tell me you're dissing Indy)??!!

Clearly the subject requires further investigation, but having never worn a fedora myself (for fear of being mistaken for someone named Mugsy), I decided to put the question to my most fashionable (and perhaps more fedora friendly) readers.

Laura P. says that to wear the fedora you need "the attitude" to go with it, and also gives props to the plaid version worn recently be Ashlee Simpson ("This is a high compliment," she adds, "because I really do not like Ashlee Simpson.").

Laura admits that she owns a black fedora with diamond studs, but considers it to be a "guilty pleasure" item worn in the comfort of her own home or "When I am out with friends and want to make a complete fool of myself."

So does this mean fedoras are a foolish endeavor? I am reminded of a few years back when some girlfriends and I attended a formal birthday party. Most of us were thrilled for an excuse to wear a fancy dress, but one of my gal pals (her name is Titsy, and she is nothing if not fashionable) decided to experiment with the whole gender-bending fedora look.

She opted for a dark suit with a grey fedora slung menacingly over one eye. Did she look cool? Yes. Could you picture her in a magazine? Absolutely. Have we ever stopped teasing her about the night she wore a fedora? Not yet!!!

Sort of like a sequined bustier or a really cute Halloween costume, my feeling is the fedora may look great, but can be difficult to work into a non-celebrity wardrobe.

Not so says Vicky O., who was quick to enlighten a Gossipy Gal as to the many faces of the fedora: "The cocky side-tilt, the mysterious forward-tilt that masks the eyes and provides a shadowy cover for smoldering looks, the friendly back-tilt that says, Hey, I'm an open person...just to name a few."

And clearly Vicky is not the only one who adores a fedora! Not only is Justin Timberlake a huge fan of the chic chapeau (sort of an homage to his musical mentor Michael Jackson), he also leans towards leading ladies with a fondness for fedoras -- both Britney Spears and Cameron Diaz are fans.

Other celebs such as Johnny Depp, Kid Rock, Kate Moss, Lindsay Lohan, Kate Hudon, Sienna Miller, Usher and J Lo have been known to feel fab in their fedoras (although some certainly look more fab than others), but those Hollywood folk are always dressing crazy and getting away with it.

Ramona O., VP of Biltmore Hats in Guelph (and unwavering champion of the fedora), assures me that you don't have to be a celeb to sport a superstar hat, explaining that, "Many men and women are finding that headwear is an opportunity to make a bigger statement than the 'I didn't have time for my hair today' communicated by the baseball hat."

Clearly the fed-ora-bate rages on!
"

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Headwraps: A Global Journey

Book Review. See the article for pictures.

Headwraps: A Global Journey by - The Globalist > > Global Culture:

"Worn in at least 44 countries around the world, headwraps are a truly global phenomenon. From Eastern Europe to the vast stretches of Africa and Asia to the Arab peninsula and Latin America, headwraps have been a quintessential detail of daily life for ages.

For over 12 months, photographer and author Georgia Scott traveled to over 32 countries to document the phenomenon of why so many people across so many cultural and religious spectrums cover their heads.

Headwraps serve a variety of different puposes and they have hundreds of nuances. They are made from different materials, used for different functions — and wrapped in a great many styles.

For centuries, headwraps and headscarves have been stunning creations of silk, cotton, gauze, muslin, wool and other fabrics.

Headwraps can distinguish the highbred from the pauper, Christian from Muslim, men from women and clan from clan. Of course, they are also used as fashion statements on the streets of Paris and New York.

In some cultures, headwraps have been wrapped the same way for generations, while in others new styles emerge every season. In many countries — including Kenya, Jamaica and the United Arab Emirates — they are worn for religious reasons.

In other countries, headwraps serve as an indicator of social differences. And in nations like Morocco, Mali and Niger, headwraps are a necessary instrument to protect oneself against the harsh climate conditions.

In 'Headwraps: A Global Journey,' Georgia Scott gets beneath the age-old tradition of covering one's head and explores why headwraps exist in such variety, what the reasons are for wearing them — and how they have changed over time."


Women In Hats

Here's a point of view from a guy who probably doesn't or never has worn a hat and is trying to be a credible observer of lifestyle. Hats help men to look fabulous, too!

globeandmail.com : WOMEN IN HATS:

"We have often admitted our distaste for any kind of headgear on men. Fedoras are pretentious, panamas for the mustachioed, ball caps for the thuggish. Perhaps it is because we so love seeing hats on women. It's true: Women always look refined and feminine in hats -- in almost any kind of hat.

Hats frame the face and keep the hair exactly where you want it. Sure, there is a certain nostalgia at work here: We like wide-brimmed or floppy hats in particular, possibly because they look like the Penguin covers of books by Virginia Woolf or F. Scott Fitzgerald, and the '20s were a particularly expressive period for women's clothes.

We're also keen on other nostalgic variations, such as the bell-shaped delight called a cloche. We like women in tennis hats and, on camping trips, with their ponytails neatly protruding from the gap at the back of baseball caps. It's cute, in the same way that a girl wearing your oversized pajama top is cute. Hell, we're even thrilled by the campy tackiness of a woman in a cowboy hat (and we don't tolerate this at all in men) because it conveys a certain fun-loving rebelliousness.

We know this is a double-standard. Sexual desire is weird that way."


Balenciaga Riding Hat

I don't know anyone who would pay this high a price for a cap. Even the most vain person has a modicum of common sense. Suggest that this is nothing more than a publicity stunt.

Balenciaga Riding Hat - Luxist:

"How much would you pay for a hat by designer Nic Ghesquiere of Balenciaga? After seeing it in so many editorials over the last few months, the Balenciaga riding hat was featured in the New York Times, complete with commentary. It was a relief to see that, even after all that seemingly positive photo coverage in the fashion mags, that it was accurately described as 'bulbous', 'alien' and even light bulb-like (in white). The NYT also mentioned that it is priced at $1,175 - steep for headgear that sort of floats above one's head.

You'll have to visit a boutique if you actually want to wear the thing."


Friday, August 18, 2006

Changing the dress code, face first

Changing the dress code, face first - The Boston Globe:

"Hooded sweatshirts, hoodies to the teenagers who wear them, are becoming the latest banned item at Boston-area schools because some students use them to hide their identity beneath hoods when they're cutting class or shuttling stolen goods from the building.

Citing safety and decorum, Randolph Public Schools is poised to ban hoodies later this month, along with baseball caps and other nonreligious headcoverings, from middle and high school classrooms and hallways.

Hoodies pose a safety threat, area school officials say, for several reasons. Students, perhaps after doing something wrong, can make a quick, anonymous exit from school by shielding their faces from security cameras. Nonstudents can blend in and sneak in and out of the school. Also, students can hide contraband more easily.

'We've got kids who may be up to something and avoid the cameras by crouching down, pulling their hoods up, and scooting by,' said Maureen C. Kenney, a Randolph School Committee member who helped devise the proposed guidelines.

For similar reasons, numerous other Massachusetts communities as well as schools in California and New York have also set limits on hoodies, a wardrobe staple among teenagers . Policies range from requiring students to keep hoods off their heads and away from their faces to leaving them in their lockers. Schools that ban hoodies also often ban pajamas, midriff-baring tops, and flip-flops."


Hat Expo opens in Moscow

CCTV International:

"As summer nears its end, Russian fashion designers can't wait to showcase their hats for the frosty fall and winter seasons.

The fourth International Hat Expo opened in Moscow Wednesday. There are hats from around the world, including China, Finland, India and the Czech Republic. The chic designs are sure to set the trends, this autumn and winter. Russia's high latitude makes hats a necessity for both men and women. And furs, among many fabrics, are a top choice. Chinese business people also earned much attention, pitching their manufacturing facilities to the world's hat-makers.
"

Cap this

Crisscross - New Products - Cap this: "It’s not often that products from Liechtenstein land on the editors’ desk, so when they do they demand our attention. The tiny landlocked country squeezed in between Austria and Switzerland is best known as somewhere the ultra-rich can store their money with no questions asked, so who would have guessed that they are now in the business of baseball caps?

Ginity Trading Corporation is a maker of carbon-fiber consumer products, and its baseball caps “introduce Formula 1 technology into the clothing industry.” Stronger than steel but lighter than aluminum, carbon fiber is used in everything from planes to automobiles — and now headwear, so “customers with sports cars with carbon fiber interiors can now buy a matching carbon baseball cap.” Snazzy!

The visors are available in three shiny shades (carbon black, gold and silver), and there are six color options for the cap fabric, including black, blue, red and pink. Some sportswear makers and hip-hop fans went through a brief metallic cap phase a few months ago, so perhaps Ginity could yet become more fashionable than its Liechtensteiner designer ever dreamed. Stranger things have happened in the world of Tokyo fashion.
"

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Hats and hoodies banned from court!

Something to think about.

Tottenham, Wood Green and Edmonton Journal:

"HATS and hoodies have been banned from a youth court - to make the atmosphere less intimdiating.

Bosses at Haringey Magistrates' Court in Highgate - where the youth court sits on Thursdays - have introduced the measure as part of a package to control behaviour at the court.

Young defendants now have to hand in baseball caps or other headgear to security officers as they enter before cases can be heard.

Friends of defendants are now also turned away at the door in a bid to discourage the number of youths congregating in the area on Thursdays - with only defendants allowed in the court with an assigned responsible adult.

This step has been taken to limit the numbers attending court following complaints about anti-social behaviour form local residents and traders around the Bishops Road courthouse.

The issue is now a priority for the police's Highgate Safer Neighbourhood Team."


Out of the Sea! Did pirates really do that?

And I thought Hollywood tended to be historically accurate. But that's showbiz.

ARTICLE: Out of the Sea! Did pirates really do that? (The Virginian-Pilot - HamptonRoads.com/PilotOnline.com):

"Did pirates wear bandannas?

Probably not. Again, Howard Pyle was the first to show buccaneers in brightly colored headbands, in his pirate fiction from the late 1800s. Douglas Fairbanks wore a bandanna in “The Black Pirate.” Real pirates could not wear loose-fitting hats because they would blow away; the only bona fide account of pirate headgear was a tight-fitting cloth or leather cap, sometimes with ear flaps, that was worn in cold climates."


Flipping Their Lids

See the slideshow of remarkable hats and caps.

Flipping Their Lids - New York Times:

"NEITHER Esphyr Slobodkina nor Dr. Seuss, children’s authors who made imaginative use of chapeaus, could have made sense of all these hats.

Some were steeped with more historic and geographic references than Epcot; others, like the clever caps at Bottega Veneta, were devoid of comparison to anything that preceded them. Marc Jacobs’s oversize toboggans, berets and bucket hats; Balenciaga’s mod riding hats; a hunting cap named after Elmer Fudd — all had a cutesy animated feel, which requires some explication. These are not simple looks to pull off without looking infantile.

Some of the more whimsical styles, turbans with sleeves dangling to the shoulders (Louis Vuitton) or the berets stretched out like pizza dough (Giles Deacon), may be the designer equivalent of those felt jester hats worn by teenagers on the slopes — all flash. But within the many variations of berets, knit newsboy caps and more, there are wearable styles you can, well, take your hat off to. "



Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Capping a big range of safety products

MSA - Capping a big range of safety products:
"Among the huge range of items such as safety eyewear, headwear, clothing, respirators and personal alarms, MSA will be featuring the latest in safety hats.

The V-Gard Elite, one of the world's largest selling hard hats, has been awarded an Australian Design Mark in recognition of industrial protective headwear.

Features include an extended peak for greater visibility and extra protection from sun and rain. The peak underside is finished with MSA's patented Glaregard textured surface, to reduce glare and eye strain.

The V-Gard Advance has a purpose designed 6 point system for increased comfort and protection. Also available with 4 point suspension the V-Gard Advance comes in vented and non vented models.

Coolgard features a sculptured design that allows for greater airflow, even in the non-vented model."


Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Hat Tricks

MySA.com: Lifestyle | Features: "Hat tricks

A reader asks: 'Why do chefs wear those white hats?'

Unfortunately, a lot of chefs are now wearing baseball caps rather than those tall white toques, but that's another story.

Here's the answer from 'The Great Food Almanac' by Irena Chalmers.

'When kings went around in deathly fear of being poisoned by their cooks, it was of vital importance that the food be prepared by a trusted member of the royal household. When the chef had proved his worth, a toque blanche was placed on his head,' she writes.

'Its pleats represent the vertical bars of the monarch's golden crown. Legend says the tall hat was originally designed to keep the head cool, but modern cooks say this explanation is just a lot of hot air.'
"


Razorlight criticise the Queen's fashion sense

NME.COM - News - Razorlight criticise the Queen's fashion sense:

"The boys complain as bears are killed to make guards' hats

Razorlight have attacked the Queen's Guards for their choice of headware.

The band have urged the Ministry of Defence to stop using real fur in the soldiers' famous headware, as it comes from Canadian black bears.

Bassist Carl Dalemo explained: 'I'm just asking people to sign the [PETA] bearskins petition to save the beautiful Canadian bears from getting slaughtered to have their fur in the Queen's Guards' hats - a completely pointless exercise.'

According to PETA, it can take the entire hide of one bear to create just one of the Queens' Guards' hat.

Johnny Borrell and the boys are just the latest stars to take part in a PETA campaign, joining musicians including Morrissey, The Rakes, Conor Oberst and Lady Sovereign in their support for the animal rights organisation.
"


Hats are back!

Have a look at the hat photographs while you're here.

Hats are back! - JAMAICAOBSERVER.COM:

"Hats are in and TEENage is in it. A hat is a simple item of clothing, or a headgear that can do so much as toning down the mood to being casual or adding a touch of class and sheer elegance.

This kind of headgear is sometimes made for either men or women while some are made fashionable for both sexes.
Wearing hats have been known as long as slavery. And this has not changed. What has happened is that they have become reserved for religious and formal functions and Caymanas race days. However, this trend is slowly changing as we are even seeing the reincarnation of polka dots, leggings and stripes.

Parts of a hat:

1 Peak / Visor - To shade the eyes, a stiff material that projects to the front and can be worn at the back.
2 Sweatband - This is a part of the internal section of the hat that is always in contact with the wearers' head.
3 Crown - The section of the hat that is always covering the head.

4 Brim - the stiff material that projects itself from the bottom section of the crown, and extends horizontally around the circumference of the hat.
5 Hatband - Usually a drip of leather, ribbon or string that keeps the hat size in place.
"


Monday, August 14, 2006

Helmet required?

If memory serves me correctly, we have seen this argument earlier this summer. One either accepts responsibility for one's personal safety or not. Mandatory laws are made for the irresponsible segment of society...and suggests that more than 50% of the population are this way...otherwise, the law may not have been created. Something to put under your hat and reflect upon?

Journal and Courier Online - Life:

"Babe Ruth's 'batting helmet' was a Yankees cap.
The wild, wild West was won by guys in Stetsons.

Generations of kids rode their bikes with wind whistling through their hair.

But today, safety helmets are everywhere. The number sold in the United States jumped to 4.7 million in 2004 from 2.4 million in 2002. They're part of football and baseball, of course, but also bicycling, motorcycle riding, skiing and skateboarding.

'I wear one; I crash a lot,' says Austin Thomas, 13, a skateboarder from Battle Ground. 'When my friends wreck, they say, 'I wish I had one.' '

Since 2000, the American Society for Testing and Materials has approved headgear standards for 13 more activities, including martial arts, horseback riding, bull riding, soccer, short-track speed skating, and -- in May -- pole vaulting.

'When I go for a long bike ride, I wear one,' says Trevor Hornsby, 10, of Andover, Minn., who was visiting Greater Lafayette last week. 'I don't wear it when I just ride in the neighborhood. It's not that comfortable with the chin strap, and it starts feeling a little heavy.'

'I think it's a good idea,' says his mom, Nancy. 'I'd prefer that he wear it every time.'

The 'helmetization' of America is a reflection of a more safety-conscious society. The trend began in the 1980s with passage of state and local bicycle helmet laws and publication of a New England Journal of Medicine study that said helmets could prevent 85 percent of bicycle head injuries.

Bicycle helmets are effective, surveys show, but many riders refuse to wear them. In 2004, bicycling and on-road motorcycling led all sports and recreational activities in head injuries: 69,476 cases required emergency room treatment.

Purdue senior Katie Worden, of West Lafayette, says she would wear a helmet if she went bicycling or motorcycling.

'I think it's very important,' she says. 'Anytime you're in a situation where you could fall off, you should wear a helmet. I think people are starting to see that safety is a good thing.'

Battle Ground's Jon Todd, a junior at Harrison High School, feels the same way.

Many motorcyclists object to mandatory helmet laws, he says, because they're mandatory; people of the same mindset opposed mandatory seatbelt laws."



It's all about 'Hattitude'

See the pictures of hats being displayed on the catwalk.

It's all about 'Hattitude' | Local News | PensacolaNewsJournal.com:

"The British poet John Oldham once said, 'And all your future lies beneath your hat.'

For 12 local high school graduates, it was beneath the hats of more than 500 who attended the fifth annual 'Women with Hattitude' hat show and luncheon Sunday at New World Landing in downtown Pensacola.

Sponsored by the Pensacola chapter of the National Coalition of 100 Black Women Inc., the show raised money for college scholarships and for the Christian Women's Job Corps, a religion-based organization that helps prepare women for the workplace.

'We are not a traditional group,' said Sadiqua Ali, president of the coalition. 'We try to do things that are innovative.'

Anna Crutcher was one of the 12 high school graduates to receive a $500 scholarship at the luncheon.

'It is really empowering to see so many special women taking the time to help out young people,' Anna said. 'Hopefully, one day, we will be in a place where we will be able to help somebody else out.'

In addition to giving out scholarships, the coalition also recognized attendees with the most unique, stylish and fancy hats and the hat with the most 'hattitude.'"

Afghanistan's burqa finds new followers of fashion

While the burqa is more than a headcovering, this article removes any veil of ignorance about this item of clothing.

New Straits Times - Malaysia News Online .....:

"The burqa is 'in'. Actually the all-enveloping cloak has never really been 'out' in the five years since the fall of the ultra-Islamic Taliban regime that forced all women to wear it.
But in today's conflict-ridden Afghanistan, the garment seen by many as a symbol of oppression is finding new followers among Western women worried about anti-foreigner sentiment, and Western men looking for ironic gifts for lovers back home.
The growing number of women beggars and prostitutes on the streets of the capital are also choosing to hide their supposed shame beneath its all-covering folds.
And there are more and more cases of male insurgents caught using burqas to conceal themselves and their weapons -- with security guard searches under the voluminous veil a no-no even in these troubled times.

For most Afghan women the burqa is still a widespread item that can be a security blanket, protection against the pervasive dust, a shield for a breastfeeding baby, or a nifty cover for a nip down to the shops without putting on make-up."

Sunday, August 13, 2006

You and "gele"

The Tide Online:
"Just as a dress chooses its occasions, so does the head gear. Some come in bright and glistering colours while others radiate in dark shaded appearance.

The headgear is said to be traditionally inclined.

This is so according to custom of the people, so you go from place to place and you find people having different head-tie. Some let it just flow, some tie it high and give it colouring. Like our women so it is just according to the custom and tradition of the people.

Even in the bible, it says a woman hair is a crown, so you need to cover it when you are in the church or in an occasion. It makes you at least look beautiful and it is a sign of respect too, to your family, to your husband.

To accentuate the beauty of an outfit, the head gear is imperative.

Small wonder why we now find most of our young girls engaged in the business of tying the head gear."

Headwear signed by heroes gives hope to cancer patients

A heart warming story of hat and cap decoration.

Headwear signed by heroes gives hope to cancer patients:

"She and the international nonprofit Caps for Kids have persuaded such stars as Eminem and Al Pacino to put pen to hat for children who often lose their hair and hope during cancer treatments.

But being a professional celebrity-signature stalker — even if it's for a good cause — isn't as easy as you might think.

Take Brad Pitt, star of Fight Club, Troy and countless paparazzi photos with United Nations goodwill ambassador Angelina Jolie.

He'd jump at the chance to sign a baseball cap for a kiddo, right?

"

Rock-and-roll mad hatter�

An enchanting story of surviving as headwear designer.

asahi.com:Weekend Beat: Rock-and-roll mad hatter�-�ENGLISH:

"But no one was laughing. Harada was quickly commissioned to produce hats for Jackson's worldwide tour. That was the catalyst for her now renowned collaboration with the music and entertainment industry. Today Harada's eclectic, adventurous hats dress the heads of the Rolling Stones and the New York electro-punk band Scissor Sisters.

Harada's hats have been featured in TV productions across the world, including the hit 'Sex and the City.' The central character, Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker), 'wore a soft beret in kimono print--very avant-garde,' Harada says.

Her work also appeared in 'Ally McBeal,' as well as embellishing the pages of fashion bibles Vogue, Harper's Bazaar and W. She was also the subject of the July 30 episode of TBS documentary series, 'Jonetsu Tairiku.'

Harada quotes punk, rock and style icons as her influences today: Vivienne Westwood and John Galliano, though 'there are no strict rules. I am interested in the movements in culture and in translating them into a 3-D expression you can wear.' Indeed, anything around her can inspire a hat. With collections named 'Electric Sirens' or 'Decadence,' she manufactures 200 models in total for four lines every year. Her latest, for autumn-winter 2006 is called 'Boys don't cry' and is inspired by the British Ska look. 'I had an image of boys in slim fitted jackets with very narrow ties--that kind of young trendy London boy with longish hair, wearing a cool hat.'

Trilbys in shocking pink, oversized Bakerboy caps in esoteric patterns, asymmetric Cloche hats in liberty cotton, silk trimmings, leather and silver chains, metal buckles or Swarovski crystal details--Harada's style is edgy, cool and elegantly understated.

"

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Hat show is a heady way to raise money for college scholarships

There is even a contest for creating men's hats. Good luck to all the entrants.

Hat show is a heady way to raise money for college scholarships | Local News | PensacolaNewsJournal.com:

"This is one time I wished my mother lived in Pensacola.

She would be the star of the show, or at least one among many of them, at the fifth annual hat show and luncheon fundraiser Sunday at New World Landing.

Sponsored by the Pensacola chapter of the National Coalition of 100 Black Women Inc., the hat show not only is a good time for women -- and men -- to show off their top hats, it also raises money for college scholarships and for the Christian Women's Job Corps, a religion-based organization that helps prepare women for the workplace.

'It's good fun for the women (and men) and a good fundraiser for college students,' said Mamie Hixon, the coalition's founding president, who came up with the idea of the hat show.

As a preacher's wife who attended church religiously every Sunday, my mother has collected enough hats over the years to open her own boutique.

Big hats, little hats, stylish hats and silly hats, her collection runs the gamut in size, color and hilarity.

I remember watching her dress on Sunday. She sometimes would have to crawl on her knees to retrieve hat boxes from under her bed or climb on a stepladder to reach the shelves to find an outlandish hat that might be studded with sparkling sequins or adorned with feathers and bows.

She would be right at home at this weekend's hat show, which will award prizes for the biggest hat (a hat judge measures competing big hats), the fanciest hat, the most stylish hat, the most unique hat and the hat with the most 'hattitude.'
"

Friday, August 11, 2006

Winnebago sewing group creates headwear for cancer patients

If anyone needs something to do in their spare time, here is an idea.

Appleton Post-Crescent: Your Fox Cities News Source - Winnebago sewing group creates headwear for cancer patients:

"The women who volunteer for Stitches of Love all have something in common — they are good with their hands and have hearts of gold.

Stitches of Love is run through the Winnebago County Association of Home and Community Education, and brings together a group of women to sew, knit and crochet headwear for chemotherapy and radiation patients.

The headwear is donated to hospitals in the Fox Valley.

The group is now in their fifth year of making hats and headbands for those who need them. From 2002 to 2005, the group delivered about 5,300 pieces of headwear, said Janet Hansen, project coordinator for Stitches of Love.

Hansen, the founding member of the group, said she began the group both because her husband is a cancer survivor and because she loves to sew.

'I knew nothing when I started it,' Hansen said.

Even with barely any know-how, Hansen was successful. The group now has nearly 100 volunteers, she said.

"

Emily Post, we need you

The Coloradoan - www.coloradoan.com - Ft. Collins, CO.:

"Another change has been the emergence of the ubiquitous baseball cap. Walk into any number of restaurants and you will see a number of males eating their meals while wearing some type of cap or hat. And, how many young males have entered your home wearing their baseball cap? This headwear is such an important part of their wardrobe, you wonder if they even take them off while showering?

"

Hats off for World Vision

The Border Mail - Hats off for World Vision:

"NORMAL school hats were banned at The Scots School yesterday and replaced with crazy looking headwear in the name of charity.

The Year 11 fundraising committee organised a “crazy hat day” for students to raise funds for World Vision Australia.

Students at the school created their own crazy hat with a crazy theme and participated in a hat parade with the whole school.

Student Fiona Copland, from the fundraising committee, said $400 was raised through gold coin donations.

“Our aim was to raise funds for World Vision in order to provide some basic amenities that we take for granted, but can change lives for the better,” she said.

“We hope to hold more days like this to raise money to help out in the world.

“Future projects we plan to complete are the provision of funds to both Breast Cancer Australia and an orphanage in Nepal.”

Prizes were also awarded on the day to the craziest hat creations."

Biggest Crowd Wearing Balloon Hats

Willamette Week Online | News | COLUMN | Winners & Losers | Cheers for hot air, jeers for pot smoke. | Wednesday August 9th, 2006 |:

"Hillsboro will soon be famous for more than its Silicon Forest and good Mexican food. Last Saturday, the city made the Guinness Book of World Records for, you guessed it, the 'Biggest Crowd Wearing Balloon Hats.' A throng of 1,874 donned inflatable headwear, shattering the previous record of 1,491 set two years ago by those fun lovers in Singapore.

"

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Flip off your lid when indoors

Hat etiquette seems to be disappearing over the last three decades.

TheStar.com - Flip off your lid when indoors:

"It appears to me that some devotees of baseball caps have them stapled to their heads. And don't get me started on the rude people who wear their hats in a restaurant while eating their meal."

Hats More Than Summer Fashion Item

Along with Time, good Health may be the next most important asset each of us has.

The Morning News: Outdoors : Hats More Than Summer Fashion Item:

"If you are going to be outside in the prime sunburn hours of 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., wear a hat. You will guard against harmful ultraviolet rays, the sunburn stuff, and you will be a little cooler.

The preferred head covering is hat, not cap, although the popular and seen-everywhere ball caps help some. Hat means something with a brim.

Don’t like hats, ladies? Go for a bandanna.

It hasn’t been all that long, several decades, since wearing a hat was fashionable and expected for both men and women.

In vogue, yes, but those folks weren’t troubled by skin cancer nearly to the extent we are today."

Friday, August 04, 2006

Worth Noting

Here we grow again in Virginia!

Worth Noting - News - Centre View - Connection Newspapers:

"Red Hat Society. A chapter of the Red Hat Society is now in Centreville. Women age 50 and up wear red hats and purple outfits and kick up their heels. Meetings are the last Wednesday of every month at 11 a.m. in the Sully Senior Center, 5690 Sully Road (inside Centreville Presbyterian Church, off Route 28 south, near the I-66 west exit). All area seniors are welcome to join or visit. Call Mary Doerman at 703-968-7889, Scotti Brennan at 703-378-5206, or Sully Senior Center Director Carma Ryan at 703-322-4475.
"

Hats Off To Him

Boston Red Sox - Hats off to D'Angelo for souvenir store - The Boston Globe:

"But their specialty is caps.

``We sell more caps than anybody in the world,' said D'Angelo, who along with his four sons runs Twins Enterprises Inc. ``We probably make 40 million hats a year. We supply every ballpark. We make them for all the major league teams.

``We also have licensing for 200 colleges. Hockey, basketball in Europe, world soccer. I used to have to go to the factory in Canton, China, seven times a year. It's a good, sizable business.'

How good?

``I don't want to get into the numbers,' D'Angelo said, flashing a smile. ``Let me tell you something, I always thought I was gonna be successful, and I tell you something, I spend less money now than ever. I just wanted to accomplish something in life. That was always my goal.'"

Hats Incredible

Cranbrook exhibit shows sculptural qualities of Treacy hats: "Hats incredible

Cranbrook exhibit shows sculptural qualities of Treacy hats

By K. Michelle Moran
Arts & Entertainment Editor

America has the largest hat culture in the world, thanks to the popularity of baseball caps, but there’s not a single team chapeau to be found in a hat exhibition at Cranbrook Art Museum.

Instead, the headgear is bolder and more sculptural at When Philip met Isabella — Philip Treacy’s Hats for Isabella Blow. “Ship” is an elaborate re-creation of an 18th century French vessel, while “Castle” replicates Blow’s palatial family home. These hats are inspired by everything from wind and speed to popular culture to the art world, with one series tipping its hats quite literally to Andy Warhol.

“We knew this exhibit was one that would appeal to wider audiences, but what I’m thrilled to learn is the respect [Treacy’s] work has earned among the art community,” said Cranbrook Art Museum Director Gregory Wittkopp. “Everyone is attracted to his original forms, his sculptural forms, but also his use of materials.”"

Thursday, August 03, 2006

I'M MAKING WAVES

Mirror.co.uk - Jobs - I'M MAKING WAVES:

"SURF fiend Jeff Sacree found the perfect cure for the painful headaches he got whenever he rode the cold waves off Cornwall.

He designed his own heat-retaining helmet.

Before long his mates wanted one too, and Jeff, 51, from Bude, decided to expand his small surfboard business into Gecko Headgear.

Today his specialised safety helmets are worn by the RNLI, the Royal and Australian Navies, the Canadian coastguard, the Hong Kong police, plus skydivers and water sportspeople the world over.

Explaining how it came about, Jeff recalls: 'I was handcrafting a small number of surfboards every week and selling them locally.

'Surfing in the UK is better in the winter, when the waves are bigger. But one major drawback is the ice-cream headaches - a phenomenon of surfing in cold water akin to a vice being applied to the temples.

'The skills I had, such as shaping glassfibre for the surfboards, could easily be used to make helmets."

Helmets everywhere

Helmets everywhere - baltimoresun.com:

"In the past few years, that same panel, the American Society for Testing and Materials, has approved headgear standards for martial arts, short-track speed skating, horseback riding, bull riding and soccer - 13 helmets since 2000.

This is in addition to headgear already on the market for bicycling, motorcycle riding, in-line skating, skiing, baseball and football. Call it the 'helmetization' of America. And blame it on an increasingly safety-conscious world in which nearly every sport or recreational activity that poses a head-injury threat - even a minor one - is sized up for a helmet.

Head injury experts worry that some new helmets have come on the market without empirical data to show the need for or the effectiveness of the headgear.

'There is limited data for some of these kinds of sports,' said Dr. Frederick P. Rivara, a pediatrics professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine who has studied helmet use among youngsters. 'Before we push these kinds of helmets we need to have an idea on the effectiveness.'

Dr. Tony Strickland, director of the Sports Concussion Institute at the Centinela Freeman Regional Medical Center in Marina del Rey, shares the same concerns, adding that poorly designed helmets could interfere with an athlete's hearing and vision.

'Some might argue that some protection is better than none,' he says. 'That's not always the case.'
"

DXL helmet wins design award

JEC Composites - DXL helmet wins design award:

"A joint effort by Pulsium Engineering and the Pryde Group has won a design award by Business Week magazine. This year's competition brought in over 1,500 entries from all over the world.

Called the DXL Helmet, it is a fusion of innovative design and engineering. Articulated protective plates and our patented ReelFit adjustment system ensures that a DXL helmet moulds to the shape of any head.

The top shell is crafted from carbon fibre for strength, and the side panels of long-fibre injected plastic for durability and impact protection. Adjustable air vents provide additional comfort. The use of lightweight, yet hard-wearing materials, make DXL Headwear up to 30% lighter than helmets currently available on the market, but also able to withstand multiple impacts without replacement.

Low-profile, streamlined and elegant, the contours of the DXL helmet are shaped to snugly fit the head while providing maximum protective coverage.
"

Milliner aims to get ahead in 'Oscar' hat competition

icLiverpool - Milliner aims to get ahead in 'Oscar' hat competition:

"ADORNED with freshwater pearls, crystals and handmade lace, Petra McNulty's flamboyant hats wouldn't look out of place at Ascot - or in a scene from the 1980s film Mad Max.

Less than two years ago the former architect from Aintree was in a classroom making her first hat after she signed up for the course as a hobby.

Yesterday, Ms McNulty, 41, learned she has made the final of what is widely regarded as the Oscars of the millinery world, the UK Hat Designer of the Year.

She is one of five shortlisted for the 2006 accolade, which will be presented by Dior designer Stephen Jones at the Olympia exhibition hall in London.

"

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

The magic of Madge

Telegraph Blogs: Fashion: Hilary Alexander: August 2006: The magic of Madge:

"I am the proud possessor of a candyfloss-pink felt stetson, trimmed with marabou and emblazoned with a multi-coloured tiara which lights up and flashes when you press a button inside the crown. It cost me all of �3.75.

Quite what it has to do with Madonna I have not yet fathomed. But it was the first item of gig-merchandise I was offered as I approached Wembley Arena last night (Tuesday) for the first of Madge’s London dates and it was so ridiculous, so girly, so totally and utterly chav I couldn’t resist.

I was not the only one. Hundreds, no, thousands of us, Madge-lovers all, turned the Arena into a sea of flashing, bobbing, pink cowboy hats.

We were all ages and genders. I spotted a girl of about 20 in full ‘Like a Virgin’ regalia, complete with BoyToy diamante belt. She was amazing. The look didn’t work quite so well on the 50-plus man who had accessorised the white corset and tutu combo with a white stetson, presumably to cover his bald spot.

"

Teen headgear

Niagara Gazette - OUR SPACE: Teens' guide to summer style:

"CONDUCTOR HAT: Looking for a unique piece to wear to a concert or club? The conductor hat is one option. Based on the look of a 1940s train conductor, this look has made a fashion comeback. Pair this headgear with a band T-shirt and jeans.
"

Mad Hatter Day

Athlone Advertiser:
"Mad Hatter Day on Sunday, August 6 is sponsored by the Mercer Group. A day for Alice in millinery funderland. Patrons are urged to cast their sartorial inhibitions aside, give free rein to their imagination and wear the most bizarre, surreal and fantastical headgear they can conjure up.

The fabulous prizes on offer will surely galvanize even the shyest and most demure racegoer - and there are not many of those at Galway!

Adult section

First prize: “The Maddest Hatter”

Luxury weekend in Newly refurbished Shelbourne Hotel, PLUS €1500 cash to spend.

Second Prize: “Alices Idol”

Weekend Break in the Mercer Hotel, plus €1000 Cash to spend on a Shopping Spree in Dublin’s most exclusive shopping district

Third Prize: “March Harebrain Hat”

A Weekend Break in the Tara Towers PLUS €500 Cash to spend on a Shopping Spree in nearby boutiques or the Dundrum Shopping Centre.

Children's section

First Prize: Playstation

Second Prize: IPOD

Third prize: Latest Mobile Phone

* Family day passes as spot prizes throughout the day"

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Hartford York Hats

You tell him, Steve!

Hartford York Hats:

"Mel Gibson: the Man Without a Hat

Hartford York Hats - Colonel Littleton Woven Straw Panama Summer Hat - The Lynnville Panama. Everyone's weighing in on the Mel Gibson 'really really bad weekend' story, and I'd like to submit my own three cents.

Mel Gibson is a man without a hat. As such, he's never really had a chance.
Fame he's got. Money - yes. Kids? Mel and his wife have litters of 'em.

But you never see the man wearing a hat. Hair extensions and wild beards are the only adornments Mel seems to wear.

We all know it takes a man of character to wear a hat well. My suggestion is that perhaps the very act of wearing a hat can imbue attributes of strength, quality and class.

Mr. Gibson, father and role-model: you need a hat."

Fashion of Hats

Island Writer - Journal - Fashion of Hats:

"What it is about hats that's always captured my attention? I'm not sure....I only know I love them. Maybe it's the glamour associated with them. The feminine mystique they always seemed to add to any outfit. Sensual, alluring, silly or stylish.....hats always seemed to define the woman. The popularity of hats from the 40's and 50's has disappeared. But I'm wondering.....why?


Two years ago when I had the chore of cleaning out my aunts house to put it up for sale, I'd found about ten hat boxes in her closet and the attic. Removing the lids, I ooohed and aaahed and I stepped back in time. Back to when fashion was really fashion for women. A time when a woman's outfit wasn't complete without a stylish hat, a pair of gloves and a handbag. The hats above are a few of the ones I found. I mean really, could a woman be any more feminine wearing one of those? The veils that provocatively skimmed her face. The beads, the feathers. Yeah, maybe it was all a bit much.....but I feel the requisite hats allowed a woman to define a small part of who she was. Here's a few more that I keep tucked away in those hat boxes....

"

THURSO NATIVE TO GIVE PRINCE CHARLES A 'BEAR' OF A TIME ABOUT FUR

PETA UK > News Releases: THURSO NATIVE TO GIVE PRINCE CHARLES A 'BEAR' OF A TIME ABOUT FUR:

"Why is Joanne giving the prince a bear of a time? It can take the entire hide of one bear to make just one hat. Many of the bears killed for these hats are shot several times before they die. Some escape the hunters and bleed to death. When mother bears are killed, orphaned cubs are left behind to starve.

“Prince Charles is a staunch defender of the environment, so it follows that he would oppose the slaughter of black bears for something as frivolous as a ceremonial hat”, says Joanne. “Until he does, PETA’s ‘bear’ will follow him around, making the case that bearskin hats – not bears – should be extinct.”

After completing a summer placement with the Environmental Research Institute, Joanne moved to Edinburgh to work with Advocates for Animals and to further her studies in environmental science with the Open University.

PETA Europe has also enlisted high-profile support from Imogen Bailey, Sir Roger Moore, Morrissey, Julian Clary, Pamela Anderson, Twiggy, Amanda Holden, Hayley Mills and others in calling for a ban on bear fur in the Household Guards’ headwear.

"

Spinning giveaways into gold

A fascinating article that made me smile!

Spinning giveaways into gold -- Page 1 -- Times Union - Albany NY: "Spinning giveaways into gold
277 Saratoga Race Course hats is enterprising college senior's latest haul

By DAN HIGGINS, Staff writer

SARATOGA SPRINGS -- Sarah Korobovsky is a modern businesswoman who can perform a little bit of entrepreneurial magic. She can turn free hats and bobblehead dolls into college textbooks.


All she needs to do is spin, and spin, and spin.

Korobovsky, 24, is a frequent 'spinner' at Saratoga Race Course. Each Sunday, when track officials are giving away tchotchkes -- this week it was blue baseball caps -- Korobovsky goes through the turnstiles literally hundreds of times, paying $3 admission each time and collecting as many of the promotional items as she can carry.

By 2 p.m. Sunday, the South Glens Falls native had been through the gate 277 times.

It's worth it. Korobovsky, a Russell Sage College senior, can fetch a huge profit on the souvenirs.

'I do pretty good,' she said, taking a break from lugging around a massive tote bag filled at that moment with about 100 hats.

'I've been getting $15 to $30 a hat.'"

Giving comfort to others

The Daily Tribune - Hibbing, MN:
Melissa Cox
The Daily Tribune

"Zobenica makes the caps for men, women and children. They are stylish, soft and can be worn during all seasons. Her caring touch makes wearing hats about style and comfort. And for those who wear them it uplifts their spirits.

“This way they can feel better about themselves to have something fashionable on their head,” said Zobenica. “I am just hoping it will make them feel a little more comfortable and maybe not be depressed — I don’t know what it would feel like.”

The caps are made with knit or woven cotton, and for winter hats Zobenica has used polar fleece for added warmth.

“It’s the softest material,” she said. “The way I understand it when anyone loses their hair the scalp becomes sensitive.”

The idea to start making comfort caps started when Zobenica visited Viking Village in Virgina. The owner, Carol Salmela, asked her if she would be willing to make hats for children with cancer. A sewing company, Husquarna, had the patterns to make these hats. So, she made four that would be mailed to children who had lost their hair due to chemotherapy treatments.

“If Carol wouldn’t have shown me the pattern and suggested it I wouldn’t have even guessed that so many have gone through treatment,” said Zobenica.

A few years later while visiting with women from her bible study group Zobenica heard there was a need for caps in Chisholm. Knowing there were people in her own community in need struck her heart, so she started sewing.

“It was simple to do,” she said. “I just have a good feeling that I can at least give that much.”"

Warm hearts by knitting something for charity projects

adn.com | life : Warm hearts by knitting something for charity projects: "Warm hearts by knitting something for charity projects

By CATHERINE HOLLINGSWORTH
Daily News correspondent

The weather has certainly been on the cool side lately. The fireweed blooms are getting near the top, and that means it's August. Jackets and warmer clothes, such as mittens and hats, are still not something I want to think about, but your favorite charity will need them soon.

Charity knitting projects are included in many a knitter's project basket. Hats, mittens, scarves and sweaters are a welcome garment to receive when the frost coats the pumpkin, especially if you do not already have one.

The First Lady Military & Family Support Initiative needs donations. Deborah Bonito, wife of Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich, knows firsthand that the families of deployed military troops need support while they are holding down the fort at home. It is both supportive of and comforting to deployed soldiers to know that our community will take the time and the energy to help keep their families warm this winter.

The initiative hosts a reception during the holiday season and gives knitted or crocheted garments to the families that attend. Last year I had the honor of helping sort and wrap piles of beautiful scarves, hats, mittens and even a sweater or two. The best item was a wonderful afghan that was given as a door prize. It was truly heartwarming to look upon these carefully made gifts of love and warmth to the military families from our community of needleworkers. You can watch this column for further information about where to drop off your handmade garments this fall.

Also consider one of the international charity drives. "