Hats: Stylishly sunny

As I begin to tidy the Passage for its summer closure later this month, I'm also preparing to spend more time outdoors, and want to say two words, right now: sun hats. 

Whether you prefer straw or fabric, romantic or rugged, wear one! I spent a miserable January and February enduring a course of topical chemotherapy for skin cancer, an experience I could have avoided by some damn common sense years ago; now I need to cover assiduously, beginning with the hat. 

According to my dermatologist friend Dr. Arthur, the brim needs to be at least 5 inches to give decent protection, so jaunty ball caps do little but keep sun off the top of the head and offer some eyeshade.

In the windows today, a selection of hats built to reduce skin damage while looking like an accessory, not a medical device.

Sporty and supple

The Lululemon All-Sport Wide Brim was made for fishers and hikers; it is also good for gardeners, who expose their necks. Price, $CAN 78. (The care instructions say "spot cleanable" but I visited the store and they said to wash it with a gentle soap like Forever New or Woolite.) Made in ivory and black; both colours have an optional chin tie.

Photo: Lululemon

Pretty and packable

Here's a side view of the packable Ginger; the bow band can be adjusted for fit; the hat weighs only 4 oz.. The price is $US 50 from the California-based company Sungrubbies; I am including them in this selection because it's hard to find a graceful sun hat offered for such an inclusive range of head sizes.   


Vivacious visor

Sometimes a hat feels oppressive; a visor is an excellent solution but so many offer only front-of-head coverage. That's why I want to show Beneunder's raffia model, which is packable, washable, and comes in five colours. The deep brim extends to the sides, and blocks 99% of UV rays. It says St. Tropez terrasse, not golf course. 

Price, $CAN 84. Physical stores operate in Asia; product ships from China.



Down Under Dragons

You can find lots of spriggy florals but how about red dragons? Handmade by Etsy seller kissmypatootie, based in Brisbane, Australia, where they know from sun hats and don't hold back on the quirk quotient—this reverses to a purple swirl! Price, $CAN 62. Donna makes wild sun hats for women, men and kids, so you can haul everyone outdoors looking sharp.


Calcarella charmer

For chic, polished protection, a handmade Calcarella straw boater from the magnificent Montréal milliner Samantha-Tara Mainville of Heirloom Hats. This is a dream hat, put it on with a white shirt and you will probably start declaiming poetry. 

Do spend time looking at her other creations; everything Samantha-Tara makes is worth a shake of your piggy bank. Price, $CAN 355.


Dr. Arthur notes that sunlight reflects up to the face from surfaces, so reapply sunblock even if you're hatted. He nudged me to carry one of these sticks in my bag; life is too short to live in shade all summer long.


Wishing you safe, sunny days, and if you've found a good sun hat let us know where. We need more than one.




 

Comments

Patricia said…
Hello Duchesse, I'm sorry to hear that you had to go through skin cancer treatment. I had a melanoma a few years ago - it started the size of a pin prick on my forearm, and I only noticed it because it was very dark and my other moles are light brown. I decided to keep an eye on it, so by the time I saw the doctor a few months later it was 3 mm in diameter. (The scar after removal was almost 2 inches long though!)
For a trip to New Zealand and Australia this past Feb/Mar I ordered last year a hat from Australian brand Solbari - shipment was fast (and included if I remember rightly) and it did a very good job. The La Roche Posay sunstick looks very useful - but I don't see it on their Canada website, nor on Shoppers; I'll keep looking. Enjoy your summer break!
Kamchick said…
Hi there...so sorry that you have had this unfortunate experience. But wait...back in the '60s, and '70s, were we ever told about sunscreen and the importance of it??? I didn't get the memo.
Leslie said…
The hat that gets most use during gardening is this : https://yourstylistsays.com/collections/my-shop/products/the-best-hat
Recommended by Jamie Lee Curtis many years ago, when the price was “only” $100. I can vouch for its sturdy construction though. I did need to buy hat sizing tape (had never heard of it before, but great stuff) to get a secure fit. It is rather large so best for limited activities; gardening, drinks on a patio, laying by or sitting in a pool, etc. I also like Eric Javits hats, though pricey. Massaging silicone gel twice daily into my 2 inch basal cell facial scar is a good reminder to keep using SPF cream. Anything to avoid chemo cream, which sounds brutal. I’m so sorry you had to endure that. That dragon hat is tempting…
Tom said…
I've been wearing sunscreen for many years--so far, no skin cancer (I still have wrinkles though),. I recently added a hat. The sunscreen in Europe and Asia has better ingredients than what is allowed in the USA (even of the same brand). I'm not sure about Canadian sunscreen. I've been bringing back the good stuff from my travels.
Duchesse said…
I stock up when in Europe but I see you can order it from Cosmetic2go though shipping charges are somewhat high. A stick lasts me a couple of years because it is a backup, not my main sunscreen.
Duchesse said…
Yes, sunscreen is regulated differently by different countries. Canada allows more similarity in content with the European brands than the US does. The one I wear, Anthelios XL SP 60 is almost identical to the French formulation with one very slight difference;I have worn both formulations.
Duchesse said…
In the '60s we applied baby oil mixed with (now-banned) mercurochrome, talk about a recipe for damage! By the '70s we had upgraded to Bain du Soleil or Hawaiian Tropics because it smelled better, but the original BdeS contained no sunscreen, just an oil with a sexy smell. And then there were the homemade or drugstore reflectors set around us to amplify the weak Northern sun. Geesh!
Duchesse said…
Leslie: Thank you, reallly good-looking straw and I like the ventilation holes_ also those paracord hat bands. I had an Eric Javits hat I loved and left behind on a theatre seat; replacing it was just too costly so I got a lookalike in a department store. All sun hats that work will be large-brimmed, but that's what it takes. The pharmacist who dispensed my chemo cream called it "a catastrophe" but some users have a worse reaction than others. (The "bad" reaction is good because that means it is working, but it causes itching, inflammation and in some persons, considerable discomfort.)
Duchesse said…
Patricia: Back to say I am relieved that your melanoma was successfully treated.
Kamchick said…
I guess back in the '50's and '60s, the dermatologists were on the golf course???
Ms. Liz said…
Your post is so timely Duchesse. I just received a new sun hat that fits my petite sized head. It is made by the brand Wallaroo. I have several hats from this brand as they fit my petite head size so well. You can order this brand online from a Canadian store - Modern Tourist which is located in Guelph, Ontario. Of course they have regular sized hats too. I have found their service to be very good. https://moderntourist.ca/search?type=article%2Cpage%2Cproduct&q=wallaroo*+hats*

Duchesse said…
Kamchick: Dr. Arthur, now retired, is a golfer but wears a wide-brimmed sun hat instead of the usual (and pretty much useless except for covering the scalp) men's golf hat. When I was growing up in the '60s there wasn't really sunblock except for zinc oxide, which we wore for skiing but would not use to sunbathe. The lotion was for tanning, not protection.
Duchesse said…
Ms. Liz: Oooh many good hats there, thank you! You can buy a great hat but it not properly fitting end up not wearing it; I've made that expensive mistake.
as someone who loves wearing hats, your selection is beautiful.
Barbara said…
Years ago I bought a hat from Helen Kaminski on ebay, unworn, for 60 Euros. A bit shocked, that this "Provence Hat" is almost 300 Euros now on the website.
Duchesse said…
Barbara: The Kaminski site has a good guide to cleaning and storing the raffia hats, which is useful even for us owning less lofty brands. They were once the only foldable raffia hat that looked stylish; now there are other brands. Storage in a hatbox kept in a cool ventilated place is important as raffias dry out.
Jane in London said…
That straw boater is gorgeous - very Audrey! I have a wide-brimmed foldable woven hat which I don't mind too much, but it's always a struggle to get my hair tucked up inside the crown. Leaving it down means a hot neck and funny lines on the hair but tying it back stops hats from fitting properly...

One thing I notice now I am older is that I have to apply sunscreen along my parting. I used to wonder why people bothered to do this, as my very thick hair meant my scalp was impervious to UV rays - but now, I absolutely get it.

Those solid high-protection blocks are brilliant when on the move. Great for swiping along the backs of hands when you've washed them, or giving the bridge of your nose a little top up when your sunglasses have wiped off whatever you applied there originally. Also: collar bones.
Allison said…
Also had a melanoma on my upper thigh ten years ago and scar is much larger than the original mole. Nevertheless now I wear swim leggings from Lands End when swimming and a meant for swimming T shirt. I rarely wear a regular bathing suit unless I am at an indoor pool. I have found the clear Elte sunscreen on a Canadian site selling eye drops of all things. I used it for years and then couldn’t find it. I am very old school and like my Tilley hats because I have a huge head and they make different sizes. I have an elegant straw with black grosse grain ribbon and an easily tucked away chin strap but it’s too ‘fancy’ for working outside. Also inherited my mom’s very wide brimmed Tilley hemp gardening hat. I wear that outside a lot it’s indestructible. My husband has a year round selection of Tilleys that he has acquired over the years much better than a ball cap for sun protection. He too prefers a wide brimmed Tilley for golfing. (I purposely avoid the Tilley’s that one sees older tourists tromping about in especially the his&hers look…;) I too found a genuine Kaminski years ago at Winners of all places. It is the genuine article and I paid thirty dollars for it of course it’s a bit tight but I stretched it out and still have it but the brim is not wide, her hats are exceptionally stylish.
Duchesse said…
Jane in London: Yes, long hair and a hat takes thought. But you gave me an excuse to tuck in an interesting English hat maker, and wonder about this hat which has a gentle back split (sorry for the astonishingly long link) : https://www.etsy.com/ca/listing/1248072631/red-linen-sun-hat-wired-brim-mulberry?ls=r&ref=items-pagination-4&sts=1&content_source=44ce06ac7a89b224968aa46ace2df85d%253ALT3f0274344975f98e414f374dbd8fe09d40ef7b22&logging_key=44ce06ac7a89b224968aa46ace2df85d%3ALT3f0274344975f98e414f374dbd8fe09d40ef7b22
Duchesse said…
Catherine Marche: I love to see a woman who wears hats well. I used to linger in hat departments watching them try on all kinds of hats.
Duchesse said…
Allison: I see why Tilley hats are so popular: the size range, the utility. Smiling about the "older tourist" model (I believe the original one?); those were my in-laws, in their matching hats and binoculars.
Jane in London said…
Thanks for the recommendation, Duchesse. The hat with the split is probably a bit Boho for me, but their wide-brimmed garden hat with ribbons is gorgeous and should be much easier to get my hair up into!

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