Guest Post: Stetsons

It is lovely to welcome back New Zealand reader Sandra to the blog today for another interesting guest post. Welcome Sandra!

The Stetson hat (and many other styles) has been manufactured since 1865 by the company founded by John Batterson Stetson (1830-1906). Wikipedia relates that his father, Stephen, was a hatter and father and son worked together in New Jersey until John was diagnosed with tuberculosis. Deciding he wanted to see the American West before he died, off he went and once there “turned a critical eye to the flea-infested coonskin caps favoured by many of the gold seekers, and wondered whether fur-felt would work for a lightweight, all-weather hat suitable for the West”. He moved to Philadelphia, designed and began to manufacture a hat that would keep the sun off your neck and out of your eyes, act as an umbrella during rain, and was light and durable.

This first hat, ‘Boss of the Plains’, was the first real cowboy hat (as opposed to the hats cowboys were wearing from their previous vocations), followed by the ‘Carlsbad’, easily identified by its main crease down the front. Stetsons quickly became known as the hat of the West.

Cowboy-style hats had a women’s fashion moment in the late 1960s-early 1970s and royal women weren’t immune. The style has a few gentle ripples on royal heads today, although has been refined and modernised. Then Princess Margrethe of Denmark is pictured in Paris in 1970 wearing a broad-brimmed cowboy hat. The styling is very 70s too, isn’t it, with the heavily patterned cravat-type scarf. 

Embed from Getty Images

In 1952 film star Grace Kelly starred in the Western ‘High Noon’ opposite Gary Cooper so likely knew a thing or two about Stetsons – and here she is, a princess now, wearing one in Liverpool on May 5, 1967, with Prince Rainier carrying 2-year-old Princess Stephanie. I like the curl on the brim of the hat, it gives it that dash of “je ne sais quoi”.  Another photo agency’s caption describes the hat as by Dior but I couldn’t find any corroboration for that anywhere! 

Embed from Getty Images

Looking through the hats Princess Margaret of Great Britain wore over the years is an eye-opening experience. Many times she went out on the edge with her millinery choices (sometimes toppling over the edge, but that’s the risk when you’re avant garde) but it does mean she was always interesting for royal hat-watchers. This hat, amazingly, is among the more staid she’s worn. Pictured below at Ascot with her husband Lord Snowden in 1970, she took the chinstrap off the next year when she wore the hat to a summer church service.

Embed from Getty Images

On a 1958 tour of Canada, the Mayor of Calgary presented Princess Margaret with “a royal blue western-style hat engraved with maple leaves”, and in 1969 a caption describes her as wearing “an attractive Stetson style hat” to open a trade exhibition in London. The hat appeared to have a furry look and seems to be a coloured version of this hat worn in Canada, most likely in 1971.

Embed from Getty Images

Modernising the look – but it’s design origins are still visible – is Queen Mathilde of Belgium, who wore this beautiful hat in 2016.

Embed from Getty Images

And here’s a beautiful blue version of the same style, worn by Lady Gabriella Windsor in 2012.

Embed from Getty Images

I would even suggest that this 2002 Trooping the Colour hat of Gabriella’s fits the brief, mainly thanks to the pinch at the top of the crown.

Embed from Getty Images

Of course, royals also get to wear rootin-tootin, gosh-dang, yee-ha real cowboy hats, especially on visits to the famous Calgary Stampede.  Here are the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge attending the city’s famous Stampede in 2011.

Embed from Getty Images

Crown Princess Victoria at the 1997 wedding of Infanta Christina of Spain. What, you don’t think this is a cowboy hat?

Embed from Getty Images 

Compare it to the ‘outlaw’ hats Robert Redford and Paul Newman wore in ‘Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid’ and see what I mean.

Embed from Getty Images

Akubra hats are Australia’s equivalent to the Stetson, although mostly haven’t crossed the divide from working hat to fashion hat. The company was started in Hobart, Tasmania in 1874 by English migrant Benjamin Dunkerley, who also invented a machine to strip the under-fur from rabbit pelts, making it economically viable for hat-making. Another English  migrant Stephen Keir joined the firm, by this time based in Sydney, in 1904, the next year marrying Benjamin’s daughter. The company has remained in Keir hands ever since. The trade name Akubra was registered in 1912. Akubra hats have been worn at numerous Olympic Games, by Australian soldiers around the world, in the movies (‘Crocodile Dundee’ 1986) and by stockmen and women throughout Australia.

A young Prince Harry wore an Aukbra for a photo shoot during his 2003 gap year in Australia, spending four months as a jackaroo (general hand) on a cattle station (ranch) owned by friends of his mother. His father sported an Akubra during a 1994 visit as did Prince William in 2011.

Embed from Getty Images  Embed from Getty Images
Embed from Getty Images

And King Willem-Alexander didn’t miss out in 2016.

Embed from Getty Images

The natural fit for a cowboy-style hat among female royals must be Zara Tindall, and here she is in an out-and-out version worn to the 2004 Christmas service at Sandringham, described in the caption as a ‘bush-hat’ so more of an Akubra than a Stetson and a fitting full stop to this particular hat journey.

Embed from Getty Images

Thanks, Sandra! It’s so interesting to see this style crossover from casual work hat to stylish women’s royal hat! I can’t help but note that Queen Elizabeth did not don a stetson for a mini-version of the Calgary Stampede, staged especially for her in October 1951, although Prince Philip did! His hat, and the hats worn by sons Charles and Andrew in 1997 were all made by Canadian brand Smithbilt, who makes the official white hat of the stampede. 

Embed from Getty Images

Embed from Getty Images

Photos from Getty as indicated and Photo12/Universal Images Group via Getty 

Duchess of Cornwall Visits Chelsea Pensioners

The Duchess of Cornwall visited Royal Hospital Chelsea this morning where she met with some of the home’s 300 pensioners (all retired members of the British Army) in their distinctive scarlet coats and smart gold piped black tricorn hats. For this event, in place of the annual Founder’s Day parade in May that was closed to external visitors during the height of the coronavirus pandemic, she repeated a lovely hat in natural straw with upswept brim, simply trimmed with a straw hatband knotted at the side.

Embed from Getty Images

We’ve seen Camilla in numerous other hats of similar shape (the brim sweep above her face suits her so well) and what makes this one distinctive is the texture of this woven straw. It’s downright delicious, giving movement and interest to the piece while keeping the overall design effortlessly light and so summery.

Embed from Getty Images
Embed from Getty Images

Designer: Philip Treacy
Previously Worn: Nov 18, 2019; Jul 9, 2018Nov 9, 2012

What do you think of Camilla’s straw hat today?

Photos from Getty as indicated 

Top Royal Hats: Cheltenham Festival 2020

Results for your favourite new hat at this year’s Cheltenham Festival are in with a clear winner:



Embed from Getty Images

Zara Tindall’s claret felt curved percher with cutout bow and arrow feathers by Juliette Botterill worn Mar 11

Photos from Getty as indicated

This Week’s Extras

An exhibition of Princess Benedikte’s dresses created by Danish designer Jørgen Bender from 1968 to 1999 opened at the Amalienborg Museum last weekend. The collection includes 21 items including Princess Benedikte’s wedding dress and a day dress (I think the one she wore to the Greek royal wedding in 1995) with matching hat. You can see the collection at the link below.

Princess Beatrice’s wedding plans were not the only ones derailed by then pandemic- Princess Raiyah of Jordan (youngest child of the late King Hussein and Queen Noor) was scheduled to marry British journalist Ned Donovan in Jordan in April. The couple was quietly married in the UK this week with a celebration planned in Jordan when public health safety allows.

The following new millinery designs caught my eye this week:
Such a pretty ivory straw sidesweep saucer with crescent of pink blooms by London- based milliner Merve Bayindir
Vibrant orange felt pillbox with ombre striped pink statement bow by Australian milliner Christine Waring
Almond straw bandeau with neutral hued leather flowers and cut leaves by Australian brand Ebella Millinery
Grass green straw button percher with straw layered ruffle by British brand All Dunn Up
Classic and elegant ivory straw boater hat with black leather rosette by British milliner Rose Collins
Punchy magenta and black straw cloche with marvelous beaded trim by Australian milliner Louse Macdonald

Glamorous pearl trimmed percher and bandeau with statement roses by Irish brand Marc Millinery
The most charming pink and green wool tartan cloche with side pleats by British milliner Anna Chocola
For our dear gents, a sharp white straw fedora with summery green & blue striped hatband from UK brand Cheeky Hats
Graphic magenta and white straw boater with patterned brim by Australian milliner Felicity Northeast
Casual natural straw trilby woven with vibrant chevron pinstripes by British milliner Jess Collett
Pale green disc with glass-like floral trim made from recycled soda bottles by London-based milliner Maria Zherebtsova

Luscious watermelon pink straw beret percher with bow by Australian milliner Lauren J Ritchie
Dramatic brim shape on this natural straw design with flowers by German brand Malinè
Lovely feather and beadwork on this autumnal hued bandeau by Ghanan brand Florey Millinery
Champagne parisisal pillbox with cloud of dotted veil by London based milliner Nora De la Quintana
Sensational black lace covered bergère with silk ribbon tie by British milliner Justine Bradley Hill
Straw design with triple layered brim in lovely shades of green by Dutch milliner Myra van de Korput
Blush straw oversize disc with exquisite magnolia flowers by Australian milliner Tracy Mackinnon