No matter what parts of the world your travels take you to, this post is sure to be useful in helping you choose the type of hat (or cap) that’s most practical while making the best fashion statement. The first thing to do is find the right hat that fits with your personal style. Read on to learn some basic, but often overlooked facts about different types of hats.
Hat vs Cap
For various reasons, the terms hat and cap seem to be used interchangeably. As a bit of a hat guy myself, the long time question I’ve always had is whether they have different purposes? Maybe it’s that they’re made of different materials, or that the choice of word is just a personal preference.
Sometimes, the word cap makes me think of my grandparents, something used for ceremonial purposes, or even the middle ages (maybe a bit of an exaggeration, but definitely something of an older era).
If we were having this hat vs cap conversation a long time ago, chances are you’d already know the difference between them. In this new era, and with some changes to the English language, the difference in their meanings seems to have been lost. I’ve personally noticed (I live in North America) that people say hat more often than cap.
Different Cap Types
Basically, a cap is a brimless hat. A big difference between caps and hats is that a cap usually has a visor. Think baseball cap, for example. Although visor hats is a pretty common search term on Google, it’s not actually very accurate. In reality, headwear with a visor should be called a cap. I’ll try to remember to call them visor caps and not visor hats from now on!
Caps come in many different sizes, as well as in a variety of synthetic materials, making them an excellent fashion accessory. Older caps used to have mesh panels at the back of the cap, but some of the new era baseball cap styles are made using plastic mesh, giving a similar appearance.
Basically, a cap is a brimless hat. A big difference between caps and hats is that a cap usually has a visor. Think baseball cap, for example. Although visor hats is a pretty common search term on Google, it’s not actually very accurate. In reality, headwear with a visor should be called a cap. I’ll try to remember to call them visor caps and not visor hats from now on!
The Baseball Cap
I recently took my son to a Blue Jays baseball game so that he could see some major league baseball players in action. While we were there, he bought a fitted hat, it was a newly released edition Jays hat, with mesh panels around the back. This just goes to show that old hat styles seem to be coming back around.
Brim vs Visor Hats
Some examples of different types of caps are the fitted cap (often worn by major league baseball players), the snapback cap, and the trucker cap. The ski cap is probably the most unusual style of cap. It does not actually have a visor, making it stand out from all the other caps.
So while the visor seems to be the main difference in the hat vs cap conversation, by definition, it’s the lack of brim on a cap that sets it apart from the hat.
Different Hat Types
And now, to the hat. While a cap has a visor, the hat offers greater all around coverage from the sun in the form of a brim. The hat comes in various sizes, great for those with small heads or even a higher crown. In reality, hat could be considered an umbrella term for both caps and hats; the hat is the larger of the two, offering greater coverage, while the cap has had its brim removed in exchange for a visor.
Just like the term visor hats is a bit misleading, people who talk about their brimmed hats are equally mistaken. While it’s nice to point out that brimmed hats offer better sun protection than a brimless hat…you’d be better off dropping brimless, and just calling it a hat (since it has a brim, by definition). Tell your friends with brimless hats that there’s actually no such thing. You can correct them, letting them know that their brimless hat is, in fact, a cap. How’s that for some light party conversation?
Fashion Accessory of Part of a Uniform
Hats can be worn for various reasons, sometimes even for religious purposes, ceremonial purposes, or as part of a uniform. A lot of hats are simply worn as a fashion accessory. Hats can be made from both synthetic materials and natural fabrics.
Some of the most common types of hats include: baseball hats, trucker hats, the all famous cowboy hat, top hat, Panama hat, bowler hat, and even the hard hat, which isn’t a fashion accessory, but more of a protective item.
Hats for travel
Since I tend to write about all things travel, I can’t resist but to end with a few pro tips. Take it from an avid traveller, who’s also a bit of a hat guy, about how you can make the most of this important personal style item wherever your travels may take you.
The Fedora Hat
I enjoy travelling to sunny destinations with my family in winter months, however. My favourite hat for warm climates is my dark brown fedora hat. It’s essentially a low profile straw hat. I love this hat for its small brim, which isn’t too assuming, yet provides decent sun protection.
I absolutely avoid checking luggage whenever possible, and unlike its cousin the Panama hat, my fedora hat makes for easier manoeuvring down the narrow aisles of the airplane, and easy storage on top of my backpack in the overhead bin.
While my wife and I usually have our two kids in tow, I can confidently say that my fedora hat is far from the dad hats that I can remember from when I was a kid.
The fedora hat is also the type of hat that works both at the beach, or in a slightly more formal setting. The fedora hat is a great option for comfort and sun protection on a beach vacation. In case you’re making your own travel plans and hope to enjoy some tropical weather this winter season, you might want to read my post 5 Days in Maui | The Maui Itinerary to Follow for the Ultimate Hawaii Experience.