I bought a pith helmet a couple years back as a possible costume part, but quickly saw it’s utility and it is my go-to summer yard work cover.
@oliversmith920010 ай бұрын
I bought one when doing urban field work on the turn of the 21st century and wear one all summer now. There is no better hat in the heat.
@jamesross179910 ай бұрын
I've got one they are definitely very functional and absolutely do what they were designed to do. If it ain't broke.......
@johnc243810 ай бұрын
Ditto!@@oliversmith9200
@stephenlevan603210 ай бұрын
Lup@@jamesross1799
@SavageMinnow9 ай бұрын
Is that to let all your neighbours know you are a white supremacist?
@psychedelic_seth2232 Жыл бұрын
This channel is what KZbin needs to have more of
@AnthonySejda9 ай бұрын
Ion my bucket list to find
@ellisandrews44010 ай бұрын
My father-in-law served in the Canadian/British Navy during WWII. He spent time in South Africa and was married there during the war. He loved his pith helmet and after the war he wore it during the summer on his motor vessel and gardening. One of his helmets came apart and the inside was made from Calcutta newspaper pages. My daughter still has his last pith helmet in her display case.
@yoeyyoey893710 ай бұрын
Nice thanks for sharing 🙏
@cdfilson10 ай бұрын
Yes to gardening! They really work. I wore my French style pith helmet (made in Vietnam) for about 15 years. The suspension straps rotted out over time. I’ll either replace the whole hat or re-rig the suspension somehow.
@ulalaFrugilega9 ай бұрын
@@cdfilsonwow if you can refurbish that hat!
@jimkunkle266910 ай бұрын
My grandfather was stationed in Agra India during WW2. The rest of his life he wore a pith helmet when he worked in the yard.
@optorch13110 ай бұрын
I picked up a wide brimmed pith helmet when I lived in Morocco. I used it often when I used to walk through the desert in South west Arizona when it was 120 F degrees outside. It worked phenomenally well. I was absolutely impressed with it's ability to provide protection for my head from the sun. The best head protection from the sun I've yet seen.
@elfpimp110 ай бұрын
Same here. Also the fact that even a slight breeze was channeled such that it would cool ones head! I got mine from my base uniform shop.
@MisterNineEleven10 ай бұрын
Youre from Arizona and have never heard of a cowboy hat?...
@dannydanny27896 ай бұрын
@@MisterNineEleven yeah, my first thought was that cowboy hats and sombreros are probably superior to pith helmets
@ice9snowflake18710 ай бұрын
Another feature of a pith helmet is that, though it doesn't protect one from blows or bullets, it is very protective of the head when crashing or cutting through brush and jungle, protecting one's head from branches and thorns and such.
@anthonyeaton515310 ай бұрын
A pith helmet is much more comfortable when you take the pith out of it. Credit; The Two Ronnie's.
@ice9snowflake18710 ай бұрын
@salvadorvizcarra769 Yea, I guess. I'm just thinking of when I was a water meter reader having to crash through bushes in people's yards to get at the water meter covers. A pith helmet would have really helped.
@kaoskronostyche993910 ай бұрын
@salvadorvizcarra769 As if the British were the only colonialists. Your name associates you with the massive damage, expropriation and genocide of the Spanish Empire. When it comes to History, anyone who opens their mouth to criticize another merely exposes the MASSIVE hypocrisy of the mouth. The Spanish transported more slaves across the Atlantic than anyone and simply worked them to DEATH and you think you have the currency or credibility to open your mouth? Now comment on the invasion and occupation of Spain by the Islams and tell us that was acceptable and fair ... or STFU. Cheers!
@jakejanssen431910 ай бұрын
@salvadorvizcarra769lol stay mad
@Swampy-ci3np10 ай бұрын
@salvadorvizcarra769 most probably foreign lands. but also, Britain Is home to (temperate) Rain Forrest and (temeperate) Jungles (Jungles Can be Forest)/ anyways in Missouri we have plenty of Burrs, Sweet GUm Trees are Common in my State in AMerica. nd have some big ones that are annyoing when it gets caught on a cats or dogs fur you have to take it off...or you cloths....or your skin... their annoying and slightly painful then. obivosuly things like rose bush. plenty of trees have vines, granted my state was historically before prohibition (it never recovered) the 2nd biggest wine producing state. Missouri is the number 1 bear state and the beer companys use many Hoppes and things like that grow on vines, so take what I say for granted but, many vine are quite thorny here. I would like to stress the Burrs though, I know Europe had Native Chestnuts too(Sugar Gum isn't a Chest Nut, but the Americas do have many Chest Nuts) , which are type of burr, granted not terribly painful, but yah you can get wrapped in spikey veins if you go hiking usually leather boots are thick enough(usually) and burrs. so Pith hats would help plenty in presumably arid environments Aswell. one must remeber spikey plants and animals exist in many places. now days Europe is pretty bland, many of its wild life is gone. British Forrest were heavily lumbered at this time, truthfully the diference between a Forrest and Jungle is simple in if there is signifcant undergrowth, which is why almost all forest atleast have jungle type SubBiomes near rivers or lakes, if their big enough they can be their own Jungle Biomes. Size is contrevelsal, some don't consider sub biomes a thing, only micro biomes which like your skin and the bacteria on your skin.
@jcd3029 ай бұрын
This is so facinating as a filipino american. Wonderful presentation as well! Thank you
@resolute1232 жыл бұрын
I normally associated this head wear with an explorer in some jungle looking for some ancient treasure. LOL.
@Doge96311 ай бұрын
For me i associated this with the 24th ranker
@jamesross179910 ай бұрын
I think of it as the gallipoli helmet worn at you've guessed it gallipoli by british soldiers in ww1. Probably because I've seen photos of my great grandfather in one.
@jonathansteadman793510 ай бұрын
You Mean SAS and LRDG, also British Victorian explorers.
@jamesross179910 ай бұрын
It's actually military issues originally.
@jamesross179910 ай бұрын
@@Doge963 like hook the "Barrack room lawyer "
@jbkstafford2 жыл бұрын
Proud owner of one I found at a market today. Thanks to this video, I now know it’s a Wolseley style canvas covered cork. Still with faded manufacturer’s label GP Embelton & Co. Melbourne Australia.
@livefree22310 ай бұрын
How on earth has my nerdy self never come across this channel yet!?! Instantly subscribed!
@elfpimp110 ай бұрын
Right?!?! 😁👍
@martinwarner117810 ай бұрын
Me too, also one day after your good self, must make a wish. Peace and goodwill.
@billwessels20710 ай бұрын
Me too! To all of the above.
@petargrubanovic10 ай бұрын
Me too 😊
@christopher95910 ай бұрын
Nerds! (Says the nerd who hit the subscribe button before watching the video).
@SamhainBe10 ай бұрын
I have a Wolseley Pattern that I often wear in the summer...particularly after listening to Noel Coward's "Mad Dogs and Englishmen" and partaking of a few Gin and Tonics - must take our Quinine you know. All kidding aside, a very practical summer hat and a great conversation starter. Cheers!
@widowrumstrypze97059 ай бұрын
30 years ago, when my son was a very pale little infant, we found him the teeniest little pith helmet! His Dad is 6ft 8, and when he'd put our little dude in his hiking carrier, he'd be up WAY high, looking like a tiny adventurer, riding some big animal of transport, it was so cute!
@ronaldmcdonald83039 ай бұрын
Did you adopt your son? You said you found him, was he abandoned by someone?
@kit27709 ай бұрын
@@ronaldmcdonald8303 "We found him the teeniest little pith helmet."
@ronaldmcdonald83039 ай бұрын
@@kit2770 I see, that sounds cute, I used to have a rabbit that I used to snuggle up to under the duvet. Sometimes I used to wrap her up with the throw, she looked so cute. When I was in my early 20s, I had a little friend, he used to adore me and let me pick him up and kiss his face. My mum told me the reason he loved me so much was that I had always been nice to him. He will be 18 this year. I still remember is cute little face, he was adorable!!!!
@kevinlee91069 ай бұрын
I wear a pith helmet in the bush in summer. The greatest thing about it, is that it can be immersed in a river, and the pith soaks up and fills with water. It then keeps my head cool for a long period, which was the grestest virtue of the pith helmet, which the video failed to mention for some reason. This is why it was a favourite in Africa and India.
@SebastianDingleswitch9 ай бұрын
4:18 ...
@OffGridInvestor9 ай бұрын
It was mentioned
@JH-kw8zy9 ай бұрын
It was silly
@alexansari21389 ай бұрын
I adopted wearing the Pith, when filming an African Adventure movie in Kenya. I picked it up from our wardrobe department. It was great as it gave me protection from the hot sun. When the director saw me wearing the Pith Helmet he thought of it as funny clownery, but later on he too wore one as he soon realized the advantages it had. Thank you for making this real informative video. Please tell us why Napoleon Bonaparte wore that famous hat of his.
@stewartmarshall411210 ай бұрын
In wearing a pith helmet any length of time, it is most gratifying to see how little they weigh. Even the big Wolseley pattern is amazingly light. And it has to be remembered that protection of the back of the neck is equally important to that of the top of the head, in combating the effects of sun and heat.
@johngorentz64092 жыл бұрын
I made a bicycle helmet for myself from a pith helmet of the French Imperialist style. I used screw rivets to fasten a harness of an old bicycle helmet to it. I figured sun protection was getting to be more important to me than crash protection, though I think it does give a bit of crash protection, too. A bonus is that it's much, much cooler for bicycling in 90F temperatures. I have to transfer the bicycle helmet hardness to a new one every 2-3 years. In cooler, cloudy weather when the sun is low in the sky I still wear a regular bicycle helmet. Now that I've watched your video I know that it derived from the Wolseley Pith helmet, but I'll continue to call mine a French Imperialist design. With the broad brim it tends to catch the wind more, so I have to make sure the chin strap is tight on fast, downhill runs. But I'm an old guy who doesn't tend to go fast, so it's not a big issue.
@Gribbo999910 ай бұрын
Better get a bike helmet designed for the purpose. Yours will be pretty well useless if you land head first after a crash.
@EpicureanHikers9 ай бұрын
Recent research from Imperial university found that even a turban offers a level of protection to cyclists so your pith helmet may not be that bad a choice
@gerardoramoncesarreynaldo9469 Жыл бұрын
Very generous and scholarly of you to include the 'salakot' from my country. I didn't know till you mentioned it, that it is the ancestor of the pith helmet. Carry on!
@garymorris747211 ай бұрын
Salamat.
@julianmorrisco10 ай бұрын
You’re takin’ the pith, mate.
@billwessels20710 ай бұрын
Got right to
@billwessels20710 ай бұрын
Got right to the pith of the subject, didn't he!
@nealcorbett11499 ай бұрын
You beat me to it. Now I'm pithed off.
@josephjuno955510 ай бұрын
I was in USMC in 1986 we went to Diego Garcia BIOT 15% South of Equater. We actually wore Pith Helmets instead of usual normal Kevlar! Very light and cool!
@CottonTailJoe10 ай бұрын
Finally someone who exists in real life from a subject I always wanted to exist but has not. Thank you for doing what you do.
@glenwillson50739 ай бұрын
Hat History - I didn't know that I needed to know, but now I do.
@reinaldogarcia7010 ай бұрын
Thanks for educating us ❤😊
@davidkuder435610 ай бұрын
Delighted to find your channel just now!! I "wear a lot of hats," in service to the sartorial philosophy, "Dress to entertain yourself" and various other professional and period attire (chiefly 18th Century American colonial characterization appearances). As a child in western Pennsylvania, I discovered at our local library an amazing Dr. Seuss book called, *The 500 hats of Bartholomew Cubbins*. Set in a medieval European town, quite a celebration of headgear, it further egged me onward. Looking forward to more of your inspiring episodes,
@CharlieEcho8 ай бұрын
Very interesting. I was issued a pith helmet along with a number of other Marines in the summer of 1970 at the Naval Air Station in Glenview Illinois. We were tasked with judging the national model airplane competition held on the base that year. The pith helmets were to distinguish us as judges apart from regular duty personnel. I still have it and still wear it to keep the sun and the rain off my head and my glasses.
@georgelaiacona1118 ай бұрын
I have an American version I wore while working on the Puuloa Rifle Range. Thanks for this. Excellent video.
@grisou387110 ай бұрын
This channel is a hidden gem
@sillysongs192 жыл бұрын
I am so glad that this channel exists
@glencrandall705110 ай бұрын
An interesting piece of history. Thank you for sharing. Have a great day and stay safe.🙂🙂
@philipmitchell-226210 ай бұрын
Chanced upon your site. Uplifting,informative and engrossing I found. Thank you. 👍
@TravelingDude4208 ай бұрын
Dude, you are very entertaining and knowledgeable- a great combo. Add in that you make your videos a perfect length which makes this a perfect watch.
@ACDBunnie2 жыл бұрын
Yay, I'm glad you finally covered this one. Despite its unfortunate past, the pith helmet, specifically the tall kind with the very narrow brim (not the one we see more often in the media that's shorter with a wide brim) in off-white (or black if for police) is my favorite kind of hat
@hathistorianjc2 жыл бұрын
Happy to provide!
@greg_42019 ай бұрын
''unfortunate past'' 😂 what the hell is wrong with you!!!???
@ianmorris49229 ай бұрын
@@greg_4201 just takin the pith is all
@greg_42019 ай бұрын
@@ianmorris4922 🤣
@matthysjuys688410 ай бұрын
Thank you interesting! My grandfather had one, in later years I used mine extensively & when migrating to Latin America I took to wearing it again. They are still made in small batches and available at high end outdoor shops in South Africa. They truly keep your head cool.
@bendenisereedy786510 ай бұрын
Fascinating! I'm so glad I stumbled on this, I love hats and have a small collection of around 30 for different uses and times of year. Living in the Scottish Highlands my waxed canvas squashed trilby is a favourite as the rim sheds rain nicely. I also have a Glengarry, which is still in use especially in militaries and pipe bands around the world and a Balmoral Bonnet, still used here by clan chiefs with eagle feathers to denote seniority. Both types have ribbons flapping untied behind, which I think looks very dashing. I'm also thinking of buying a British Naval rating's cap with the HMS ribbon in homage to my grandpa.
@shaynebray4085 Жыл бұрын
Cork sun helmets were issued to some American troops including the models M1880, M1887 and the M1889 which were originally inspired by the success of Prussian arms in the Franco-Prussian War (a similar pickelhaube type helmet covered in felt was adopted for parades in the early 1870s). Some sources state that these sun helmets (which were based on the British model) remained in use by some Army and USMC units through as late as 1909. It was never a popular headdress with the rank and file and disappeared fairly quickly, but seemed to be liked by officers, who purchased theirs privately, and was worn by them in Cuba and during the invasion (or occupation) of the Phillipines. The fiber sun helmet was issued in 1940. Japanese soldiers were also issued with a cork sun helmet known as the "safari" pattern.
@Halo2nothing111119 ай бұрын
There's one on display at the Fort Davis Historical site in West Texas. I suppose if the US military was going to make use of the helmet, the South West would be the place.
@spacemanspiff30529 ай бұрын
My Grandfather, a US Navy Submariner, was issued a pith helmet in the South Pacific. The US Postal service uses a plastic version still today.
@joshuaunderwood79 ай бұрын
One must never underestimate the military importance of hats. Great video.
@greggusan8 ай бұрын
This was great! My first but not list video from this channel. I find hats or headwear so interesting, and often wonder how they developed into the shapes and roles that they have. I've been living in Korea for over 20 years now, and marvel at all the different headwear worn throughout their history. Period dramas are an all-you-can-eat buffet of some of the most unusual, unique pieces to ever adorn a head, each one I'm sure signifying a certain class or role in society. If you haven't done so already, I'd really love to see a vid on this! Or a series, as there are so many, and perhaps have their origins in other neighboring Asian nations.
@hayden195510 ай бұрын
I have (& very much enjoy wearing) a beekeeping hat. It is very cool with an open weave. Its design very much resembles the pith helmet.
@leej35010 ай бұрын
I wear one of these for working outdoors in the summer. Not supposed to be protecting from impact, mine helped when I slipped from the bottom rung of a step ladder and my head would have been at least scratched up by some stumps on a bush I fell back into. Good and practical headgear still.
@annwagner57798 ай бұрын
A friends of ours in the Washington, DC, area had a pith helmet with a little battery powered fan in it for very hot days. A novelty with practical value!
@fabricio-agrippa-zarate8 ай бұрын
With my recent interest in hats, this channel is such a wonderful discovery :)
@robhunt-watts89085 ай бұрын
I wore one for ceremonial duties as a British, Royal Marine. However our most iconic headgear was the commando Green Beret. I earned my beret in 1970 and still have it.
@Cavalluiccio9 ай бұрын
My new favorite channel. Thank you. Well written and produced.
@Bodkin_Ye_Pointy10 ай бұрын
I loved this presentation. I switched from a broad brimmed Akubra felt hat to a Solar Topee for the one advantage you didn't cover. The Akubra was not wearable in high wind. Winds that at the time were particularly devilish in the city streets of the CBD. The ST simply does not blow off. I even had some moron try to flip it off into traffic, but it did not move and he walked away with alacrity. So very stable headwear. A very pleasant side bar is the amount of positive commentary I get for it. The hat gets a lot of love from total strangers who stop to comment, and on some occasion, wax lyrical about their school years. Me, not so much love. In any event, the only time it is not my hat of choice is on very rainy days where I am uncertain of the impact of the water on the hat. But as a resident of Sydney Aust' I have to tell you, it is the perfect accoutrement for the climate here, both in summer, (Very hot and humid), to winter, (Where temp's regularly drop below 10 c and we have to wear long pants).
@robertevans171910 ай бұрын
At last you have called the pith helmet a solar topee the regulation headgear in the Far East my father was issued along with a spine pad in 1939 Hong Kong. This was similar to my grandfather's solar topee issued to him in the West Indies in 1896 and then India which were soaked prior to wearing in very hot weather - which I still do today with my Akubra when it's scorching. In Hong Kong in the 1950's the broad brimmed solar topee was commonly worn together with white cotton gloves by PWD lorry drivers shifting tons of soil and aggregates on their flatdecks with their gangs of Hakka women labourers to load and unload. The french version was/is common in Viet Minh NVA service.
@UrlagEntertainments10 ай бұрын
Very professional and informative post, thank you very much!
@shawngilliland2439 ай бұрын
@HatHistorian - Vive le pith helmet! Marvelous presentation; thank you very much!
@PDOGG936510 ай бұрын
Thank you for this information, I freaking love historical head wear
@DAToft9 ай бұрын
I had no idea I needed this in my life! I'm happy I came across this video :)
@dawg0652 жыл бұрын
My Dad would wear one of these when he was a Mailman in Florida. It's made out of a hard plastic and a light blue color. I still have it. I think it's cool
@hansoak366410 ай бұрын
I grew up seeing mail carriers wearing pith helmets whilst they were delivering mail in the midwest. Back then, I just assumed it was standard hot weather postal attire and it might have been. Edit: Whoops! I commented too soon. Right after I continued to watch, he addressed that very thing in the video. 😂
@redtobertshateshandles10 ай бұрын
Here in Australia they were made of some type of natural material. Too weird for me, I chose a felt hat.
@ferretyluv6 ай бұрын
Then it’s not a pith helmet if it’s plastic.
@elfpimp110 ай бұрын
As a hat wearer of MANY styles, I approve of this channel. SUBBED!!
@willardjohnson383210 ай бұрын
As usual, a nice, informative, pithy presentation!
@RR47119 ай бұрын
I have a wide brimmed cork version I wear every time I’m outside working in my large yard (I don’t wear it out in public as I don’t want to offend anyone, though I don’t think it would be an issue in Australia). It’s better than any other sun hat and the ventilation is amazing. There is a little sound as the wind blows through it but that doesn’t bother me. I’d highly recommend anyone who’s in the hot sun often to try one, but make sure you get a genuine cork one not a cheap plastic costume one.
@boredincan9 ай бұрын
I don't know how you managed to create a channel around historical hats, but I do tip my hat to you. I also don't know why this year old video was recommended to me, but I am very glad it was. Eloquently spoken, well researched, made the points you wanted quickly and succinctly. Just brilliant. Sub from me
@BIG-DIPPER-5610 ай бұрын
Fantastic - Thanks !
@tjpit10 ай бұрын
I still have mine from the Corps. I have never found a hat that keeps you cooler outdoors. Mine is the wide brim disc type, much better than the dome style. They really keep you from getting your head torn up as you push through brush.
@charjl9610 ай бұрын
I don't usually care about hats, but this is interesting. Bravo.
@jeetime943610 ай бұрын
Very well done Chap!! Cheerio and off you go!
@jomatz1228 күн бұрын
Thank you for acknowledging the Filipino Salacot/Salacot as an origin and precursor to the Pith Helmet. Maraming Salamat po 😊
@NyPer92010 ай бұрын
Thank you for your very interesting and informative features!
@user-fd7vt5zx7q9 ай бұрын
Very interesting.... But leaves me wanting to know more about their construction... i.e. were they woven pith? Or press formed with resin? And was the cloth covering glued on or could it be removed for cleaning?
@RivLoveshine9 ай бұрын
I love pith helmets and other clothing items associated with jungle explorers and safaris! I'm glad KZbin recommended this video!
@sonnyfinch16252 жыл бұрын
This channel needs more subscribers!
@hathistorianjc2 жыл бұрын
I quite agree, in my unbiased opinion ;p
@Roger-s6r9 ай бұрын
Nice hats, thanks for sharing, quite insightful and entertaining
@billmmckelvie518810 ай бұрын
The Pith helmet was helped on its way to demise by the introduction of the Slouch hat which also appeared at the same.
@docM19 ай бұрын
I remember regularly wearing a Pith Helmet in my childhood in the 1950s in India, during the extreme heat of summer time, when going to school. Very many fond memories of this useful headgear. 👍
@masahige23449 ай бұрын
Imperial Japan also issued many models of pith helmet for military and colonial personnel, starting in the 1890s. The most well-known is the Army's Type 98, which had a bamboo (later wicker) internal shell and was more bowl-shaped, being designed to fit over the Type 90 steel helmet during combat and to be worn separately the rest of the time.
@Legos4Musketeers3 ай бұрын
Nice Missouri flag on your wall, love from a Missourian myself.
@Saxonx50010 ай бұрын
Some remarkable similarities to my old cork Cromwell fire helmet from the sixties to eighties as well, especially with the helmet that had a ventilation hole!
@crazyoilfieldmechanic319510 ай бұрын
Excellent and informative video 👍
@darrenerickson128811 ай бұрын
Thanks - nicely informative!
@miketayse9 ай бұрын
Because I have very pale, Irish, white boy skin, I've worn various variations of wide brim pith helmets for years. Very practical, with the way the hat is held off the head. I've had a couple of old cork ones, which are very light, but 'kinda delicate. Nowadays I use a light brown plastic pith look-alike, (postal service variety)not as nice as the cork, but durable. I have a hard hat for construction with a simliar shape, but has some vents at the top. Many people think I wear it because of style/eccentricity, but nothing could be farther frome the truth. They're just very practical in sun and rain. Wind, not so much. Nice vid, thanks!
@fritzfromsouth59352 жыл бұрын
The Brazilian armed forces used it in the early 1900s, and from the 1930s onwards, when the Pickelhaube and the kepi were no longer used by soldiers and corporals, a helmet was developed that mixes the style of the Pith Helmet and the Adrian Helmet, but it reminds more the Pith Helmet, even being made of leather, and over time metal was used, until today it is a symbol of the army and was even used in the 2019 military parade.
@vulpes7079 Жыл бұрын
Mano nunca vi esse
@fritzfromsouth5935 Жыл бұрын
@@vulpes7079 Em fotografias antigas da era Vargas dá para ver esse capacete.
@japhfo9 ай бұрын
General Wolseley was in fact one of the early users of what became the Wolseley helmet as shown in photographs from the Nile campaign of 1884-85, just as he was a pioneer of the cork sun helmet, ordered for troops sent to West Africa in 1874 and adopted in 1877. He was "the very model of a modern Major General"
@inregionecaecorum Жыл бұрын
I have a picture of my dad wearing one of those back in Egypt.
@kevinbuchanan668710 ай бұрын
Very informative, great job!!!!!
@louisburke892710 ай бұрын
I always wondered about the sun coverage thanks
@SnooperSquirrelFilms10 ай бұрын
A very good well done video on the history of this hat / helmet
@joeblake3423 Жыл бұрын
Hello! I enjoy watching your videos and admire your passion for hats, and also your bilingual talents. The “Pith Helmet” video was very enjoyable. Tres bien!
@markfilippone384510 ай бұрын
Jolly good show, ‘Mate!
@jarniwoop10 ай бұрын
I wear a sun helmet during the summer here in the high desert, it's a Wolseley. I wear a Colonial pattern when riding my velocipede. You can't beat them. I suggest Peter Suciu's book Military Sun Helmets of the world.
@timper432610 ай бұрын
When I was young, we used to call them safari helmets (the low wide brim ones). Very informative video.
@RobbyMcZ9 ай бұрын
Instant fan! Great work sir!
@AI-hx3fx9 ай бұрын
In the Spanish period, some of the Principalía or Hispanicised nobility, along with the rich gentry among our ancestors, would wear salakót fashioned of giant whole tortoise shells. The ornamentation mentioned would range from beaten silver accents nailed to the surface, to real pieces of silver dangling from the brim. The spiked finial may also be of silver, while some added a plume instead. The nobleman, usually transformed into a petty local official of the Spanish Crown, added to this regalia a silver-tipped cane that functioned as his staff of office. These are now museum pieces, and we often wear salakót only for cultural presentations, as woven hats of Western design are more common in the agricultural sector. Woven sorts and those made of a single, large leaf are also for sale. This is not to be confused with a kattukong, which is from the northern Ilocos region and made from the outer shell of a large gourd that is shaped then varnished. Its brimless profile is far rounder and narrower than a salakót, resembling a straightened Phrygian cap, and its manufacture is a separate art form.
@darkstarr9849 ай бұрын
Whoa. 6:55 That French version looks like what I dreamed of wearing when I was little, tied down with a scarf.
@fourgedmushrooms59589 ай бұрын
Jolly good show old chap 😁
@alexsuholitko2528 Жыл бұрын
So cool story. Kudos 🎉
@Trey_816 Жыл бұрын
I've seen my local letter carrier wearing a pith helmet (the shorter, wider design).
@stanpodol823310 ай бұрын
Better late than never, subscribe immediately! Thank you for an excellent performance and super info!
@stanpodol823310 ай бұрын
Thanks again and greetings from Poland! Now I shall have to catch up with the rest which I sure enjoy like this one.
@dukesharingham10 ай бұрын
Great! I have learnt something new. I have always liked this helmet, its shape and use, regardless of its partial colonial significance.
@doop676910 ай бұрын
Feel better with that little virtue signal at the end of your comment? Just say you like the hat and leave it at that. Everything doesn't have to be an obnoxious political statement.
@geoffdean353210 ай бұрын
My mother told of local amusement when my father, born 1895, arrived from temperate Adelaide, grandly wearing white suits and white pith helmet (then called a Solar Topee) in tropical Queensland in the mid 1930's, then concidered a primitive backwater by "sophisticated" southern people.
@columbmurray10 ай бұрын
As a former Royal Marine as an honour guard in Edinburgh , the inside string loosened inside the helmet. To keep the helmet tight on my head I had to open my jaw fully throughout the parade. But eventually this caused my muscles to shake and looked as if I was frightened ! I was humiliated by the WRENS behind who started giggling.
@kalon2278 ай бұрын
Not many know this but I was stationed in the Marines in 1954 at 29 palms, California. We were issued pith helmets.
@fredsalfa2 жыл бұрын
That’s very interesting thank you!
@SOTPOD9 ай бұрын
thank you! this was very interesting and informative - subscribed!
@msamour3 ай бұрын
Some twenty years ago, we stopped for refuelling at a British American base in the Indian ocean. There was only one store on the island, and in the service clothing section were about 40 of these helmets. Since I was the first one to find the store, I ask the clerk if these hats were available for sale, and the lady said sure. No one had touched these hats in years since everyone posted to that island brought their own. I told her she would have none left by the end of the day, and she gave me a sceptical look. I bought one for 7.50$ US, which I thought was a pretty good price. On my way to the beach I saw others from the ship, and they asked me where I found the cool hat. I pointed to the store, and from what I could see, all the hats were sold in less than 10 minutes. Not only did my fellow sailors bought all the hats, they bought any other exotic piece of souvenirs they could. They cleaned out the shop. I went back to the store later out of curiosity. The lady tending the store told me I was wrong. Not only were all the Pith helmets were gone, they were gone in less than an hour. She understood why we all bought them after she found out we were Canadian, and they are not part of our uniform kit. There were about 40 of us wearing the Pith helmet on the ship for about a week. This lasted until the captain got fed up and banned the wearing of the "silly explorer hat" (according to him) while in uniform.
@That_Freedom_Guy10 ай бұрын
You wear the crown as the King of Hats with grace and dignity. 👑
@nozrep10 ай бұрын
in these modern times down in my part of coastal Texas and I think other places too where they are popular, I’ve taken to wearing the “sun shield” neck gaiters since they are stretchy and I prefer baseball style caps. I just pull it up over the top of my hat and then it also covers my whole face. And they’re super light and breathable too. For fishing for which I wear it mostly, they are practical as opposed to a super wide brim straw hat which lots of anglers also wear. Also, they make Texas flag ones!😅
@carausiuscaesar567210 ай бұрын
Just got a budenovka hat and get lots of compliments.Fits well and is warm and stylish with a revolutionary flare.🇨🇦
@2394Joseph10 ай бұрын
When anyone walked into the officers' mess with their helmet on, everyone would shout, "Pith off".