The rise of
flat caps: genuinely classless – or a way for wealthy men to seem authentic?
Finally,
the ONS has added the humble flat cap to its annual list of the things Britons
are spending their money on. As an avid wearer, I know it’s the only way to get
ahead
Dan Kuper
@kuperdankuper
Tue 12 Mar
2019 18.01 GMTFirst published on Tue 12 Mar 2019 16.46 GMT
Every year
the Office for National Statistics updates the shopping basket with which it
tries to sum up Britain’s spending habits. Such outmoded fripperies as
three-piece suites, CD players and crockery sets are out. But for 2019, for the
first time, the cap fits – because alongside herbal teas and home-assistant
systems such as the Amazon Echo, the humble flat cap has joined the statistical
shopping party.
Ideally
partnered with whippets and mufflers in northern England, or football rattles
and toothless grins, the flat cap was for many years associated with the TV
chimney-clamberer Fred Dibnah who, according to his widow, kept his on the
bedpost along with his watch chain and bought three in anticipation of his
wedding. In the past 10 years, the cap has enjoyed a renaissance, taken up by a
succession of lads-made-good – Guy Ritchie, David Beckham, Alex James and Idris
Elba – before finding its ultimate expression in the Brummie
yelling-and-chivving drama Peaky Blinders, where it serves as a suitable place
to stash razor blades.
But while
the flat cap might seem an easy way for wealthy men to signal working-class
authenticity, it is in fact one of the few genuinely classless items of
clothing. Gents on a pheasant shoot have worn the cap as much as bootleggers on
a raid. And this flexibility – along with the nation’s enduring fondness for
the understated – may be why it has endured through lean times to bounce back
into the public affection.
Supposedly,
the flat cap first became popular after a short-lived law passed in England in
1571 that obliged everyone to wear a woollen hat to boost the wool trade, which
does perhaps explain its utilitarian form. It is hard to think of how you would
make a hat less showy than the flat cap, which is, after all, pretty much what
would result if you just dragged some fabric over your head, added a minimal
brim and fixed it with a band.
Comfortable
and practical for hard graft, while offering a quick-and-easy dash of style,
it’s the hat that can do it all – although there are apparently limits. BBC
News reported recently that a man had been asked to take off his flat cap on
entering a Tesco in Dudley, West Midlands. He point-blank refused; I think we
can all take our hats off to him.
As a
flat-cap sporter myself, the rise and rise of the hat brings mixed feelings.
The true aficionado has already foregone the endless parade of high-street
versions; once the Beckham family started wearing them en masse, it was time to
look further afield. The Italians do a lovely version. Swap Cillian Murphy for
Godfather-era Al Pacino; that’s how to get ahead.
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