List of hats and headgear
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an incomplete list of hats and headgear (that is, anything worn on the head), both modern and historical.
Contents |
[edit] Hats
[edit] Caps and hats commonly worn today
- balmoral a Tam 'o Shanter or Tammy
- baseball cap
- beanie or skully
- beret
- borsalino
- boucle cap
- bucket hat or classy lady hat
- capuchon
- cloche
- peaked cap
- fedora
- floppy fedora
- flat cap, also bunnet, cloth cap, driver cap, golf cap, or windsor cap
- flip hat, baseball style cap with the brim intentionally flipped upwards (associated with punk rock)
- garrison cap
- Gatsby cap, also newsboy cap
- Ivy cap, the typical Irish hat
- kepi
- kufi, traditional cap worn by Muslim males
- nasaq, the crocheted headgear of some Canadian Inuit
- nightcap
- salakot
- skullcap
- student cap
- Suma cap
- tam, most commonly associated with the Rastafari movement
- taqiya, also tagiyah--resembles the yarmulke
- tuque, also knit hat, knit cap, sock cap, stocking cap, watch cap, toboggan, ski cap or skull cap
- turban
- Plastic Rain Hat
- yarmulke, also kippa, kippah or skullcap, Jewish traditional
- zucchetto
[edit] Hats worn in the past, or rarely worn today
[edit] Men's
- Anthony Eden hat
- beaver
- Beefeaters' hat
- bicorne
- boater, also basher, skimmer
- bowler, also coke hat, billycock, boxer, bun hat, derby
- cabbage-tree hat a hat woven from leaves of the cabbage tree
- capotain (and women) - a tall conical hat, 17th century, usually black - also, copotain, copatain
- caroline - 17th Century
- carriage hat - 1780s-1820s
- caubeen - Irish hat
- cavalier hat, also chevaliers, wide brimmed hat trimmed with ostrich plumes
- chapeau-bras, also chapeau de bras - 18th to early-19th-century folding bicorne hat carried under one arm
- Chaperon adaptable late Middle Ages "dead-chicken" hat
- chimney-pot hat, also lum-hat, Victorian, also worn by clerics in the Greek Orthodox Church
- cocked hat
- deerstalker, hunting cap with fold-down ears, associated with Sherlock Holmes, Elmer Fudd, and Holden Caulfield.
- fedora
- fez
- homburg
- karakul
- kolpik
- Panama hat
- pork pie
- shtreimel
- spodik
- sombrero
- top hat, also stovepipe hat
- tricorne
- trilby
- ushanka
- war bonnet
[edit] Women's
- bandeau hat
- beehive
- bergère hat
- bloomer
- bongrace - a wide brimmed hat, 17th/18th century
- Breton
- capeline - 18th/19th century
- capotain (and men) - a tall conical hat, 17th century, usually black - also, copotain, copatain
- cart-wheel hat - low crown, wide stiff brim
- Gainsborough hat -a very large hat often elaboratly decorated with plumes, flowers, and trinkets.
[edit] Unclassified
- balibuntal - straw hat from the Philippines
- castor or caster - beaver or rabbit
- chip hat
- cloche
- cockle hat
- cony or coney
- coolie hat
- copintank, also copentank, coptank, copitaine
- cordies
- Cossack hat
- crinoline , also gibus-hat
- demicastor hat
- Directoire
- Dolly Varden
- fan-tail hat
- flat
- Gainsborough
- Garbo hat
- Garibaldi hat
- gipsy hat
- gossamer hat
- grebe hat
- halo-brim hat
- the Hat Terrai Gurkha, worn only by Gurkha Contingent officers in Singapore
- Homburg; a black Homburg was also known as an "Anthony Eden" (after the politician Anthony Eden)
- hunting hat
- jerry
- kausia
- Kevenhuller
- kiss-me-quick hat
- Leghorn hat
- mandarin hat
- Manilla hat
- marquis hat
- matinée hat
- Merry Widow hat
- Moab
- montera
- mourning hat
- mousquetaire
- muff-box
- Müller hat
- mushroom
- petasos
- pill box hat
- sugar loaf
- Trilby
- veiled hat, also bird cage hat
[edit] Caps
[edit] Caps worn by men in the past, or rarely worn today
- aviator's cap
- barretina
- capeline - a steel skullcap worn by archers in the Middle Ages
- cap'n'bells ("Jester cap" or "jester hat")
- Phrygian cap
- smoking cap
[edit] Caps worn by women in the past
- mob-cap
- pinner
[edit] Caps worn only by nobility and only on ceremonial occasions
[edit] Bonnets
[edit] Bonnets for women
- Cabriolet
- Capote - soft crown, rigid brim, 19th century
- Chip bonnet
- Gypsy bonnet - shallow to flat crown, saucer shaped, and worn by tying it on with either a scarf or sash, under the chin, or at the nape of the neck - 19th Century
- Kiss-me-quick
- Leghorn bonnet
- Mourning bonnet
- Poke bonnet - Early 19th Century, "Christmas Carol" style, with a cylindrical crown and broad funnel brim
- Ugly - a kind of retractable visor that could be attached to bonnets for extra protection from the sun, 19th century
[edit] Bonnets for men
- glengarry bonnet
- tam o'shanter
- Frob head spectacular
- Glassy Oh So Fine
[edit] Helmets
- Adrian helmet
- balaclava helmet
- beer helmet (a.k.a foam dome)
- bicycle helmet
- Brodie helmet - helmet of the British tommy and U.S. doughboy of WWI
- capeline - a steel skullcap worn by archers in the Middle Ages
- crash helmet - broad term for helmets designed for flying, racing, driving, etc.
- custodian helmet - the British "bobby on the beat" helmet
- diving helmet
- equestrian helmet
- fire-hat
- flight helmet
- football helmet
- hard hat
- helmet
- iron hat
- miner's helmet
- motorcycle helmet
- Pickelhaube
- pith helmet (a.k.a. sun helmet)
- riding helmet - see equestrian helmet
- space helmet
- Spangenhelm
- Stahlhelm
- Tarnhelm
- wedding helmet
- welding helmet
[edit] Military Helmets
- PASGT
- MICH
- Lightweight Helmet
- Combat Helmet TC "D"
- SPECTRA
- Stahlhelm
- Brodie helmet
- Adrian helmet
- Soviet helmets during World War II
- Pickelhaube
- Hełm wz. 31
- M1 Helmet
- Riotsquad helmet
[edit] Hoods
- bonnet head
- Chaperon (headgear) adaptable late Middle Ages "dead-chicken" hood and hat
- Flemish hood
- French hood
- gable hood
- hood - modern or historical, attached to tops or shirts, overcoats, cloaks, etc
- Ku Klux Klan hood
- Mary Queen of Scots
- Medieval hood
- mourning hood
- riding hood
- Stuart hood
- bongrace - the stiffened back of the hood when flipped over the forehead to provide shade; also a separate headdress to provide shade, worn with a hood or coif, Tudor/Elizabethan
[edit] Headbands, headscarves, wimples
- abaya
- buknuk
- chador
- Chaperon (headgear) adaptable late Middle Ages "dead-chicken" hat, hood and scarf
- coif
- dupatta, also shayla or milfeh
- khimar
- headscarf, also khimar, hijab, ohrni
- snood
- veil
- wimple
[edit] Masks, veils and headgear that covers the face
- balaclava (helmet) or skimask
- boushiya
- burqa, also burka, burga, burqua
- diving mask
- full-face diving mask
- gas mask
- mask
- loo mask
- niqab
- veil
- wedding veil
- visor
- headband
- Eye-mask
[edit] Other headdress
[edit] Women's
- alice band
- bandanna
- bandeau
- bongrace - a shade for the face, sometimes part of a hood, or a separate garment worn with a hood or coif; Tudor/Elizabethan
- mitre, also miter
- visor
[edit] Men's
- Arab headdress
- bandana, also bandanna
- visor
- do-rag
- stocking cap
- topor - Bengali men's wedding headgear
[edit] Jeweled
[edit] Wigs
[edit] Headgear organised by function
[edit] Religious
- biretta
- bowler hat (Orange Order)
- Canterbury cap
- Chaperon (headgear) late Middle Ages hat, retained by some academic, legal and Chivalric Order uniforms
- galero (cardinal's hat)
- coif
- Black Fedora - worn by many Haredi ("Ultra-Orthodox") Jews
- fez
- gasa, worn by Japanese monks
- Geneva hat
- Kamilavkion
- Klobuk
- Mantilla
- mitre, also miter, (bishop's tall pointed cap)
- Papal tiara, also triregnum
- Shtreimel, Hasidic Jewish hat
- Skufia
- Spodik, another type of Hasidic hat
- turban
- veil
- wimple a nun's headdress which covers her hair, sides of her face and throat, worn by other women in earlier centuries
- yarmulke - Jewish skullcap; also Kippah, koppel, capel, coppel
- zucchetto - Catholic skullcap; also pileolus, berettino, calotte, subbiretum, submitrale, soli-deo
[edit] Military and police
- barretina
- Beefeaters' hat
- bearskin
- beret
- bersagliere
- bicorne
- busby
- campaign hat, also drill instructor hat, drill sergeant hat, ranger hat, sergeant hat, Smokey Bear hat
- Caubeen
- chapeau-bras, also chapeau de bras - 18th to early-19th-century folding bicorne hat carried under one arm
- combination cap
- Custodian helmet, head wear of the British police officer, ranks of Sergeant and Constable
- feather bonnet
- flying helmet - closely fitting solid helmet designed to resist impacts within the cockpit of military aircraft - colloquially known as a 'bone dome'
- garrison cap, also campaign cap, cunt cap, flight cap, garrison hat, overseas cap
- gas mask
- Glengarry, also Glengarry bonnet, Glengarry cap
- Hardee hat
- helmet
- jeep cap
- kepi
- shako
- slouch hat
- Spanish hat
[edit] Officials and civil workers
[edit] Other specialist headgear
- chef's hat, also toque blanche, or more familiarly, toque
- coronet
- cowboy hat
- crown
- fire-hat
- gas mask
- mortarboard
- night cap
- nurse's cap
- power dome
- printer's hat also pressman's hat
- Santa's hat
- scrum-cap
- shower cap, a flexible plastic covering to protect the hair from getting wet, as used when taking a shower.
- space helmet
- swimming cap
- topor - Bengali men's wedding headgear
- visor
- wedding veil
[edit] National dress; association with a country or people
- barretina - Catalan
- bearskin hat
- beret - French
- Bhatgaunle Topi - Nepal
- Breton, also Bretonne
- clop - Romanian
- coolie hat
- coonskin hat - American frontiersman
- Cossack hat
- fez
- feathered headdress
- Four Winds hat
- glengarry bonnet
- Għonnella or Faldetta - Maltese
- Haida hat
- Mandarin hat - Chinese
- Montenegrin cap - Montenegrins
- Phrygian cap - Roman, French
- qeleshe - Albanian
- šajkača - Serbian
- salakot - Filipino
- sari - India
- Shripech - Traditional Crown of Monarch of Nepal
- slouch hat, also digger hat, Australian slouch hat
- tam o'shanter - Scottish
- top hat - English
- topor - Bengali men's wedding headgear
- turban
- tuque or toque - Canadian, esp. French-Canadian/Québécois
- ushanka - Russian
- Welsh hat
[edit] See also
- List of types of clothing
Categories: Headgear | Hats | Caps