I look so lousy in a hat now, but I'd love to look great. I'd wear them if I could. No not Easter Parade kinds of hats, I want to wear Diane Keaton hats. Not Bella Abzug ether, thanks.
I love to make hats. I've crocheted and knitted hundreds.My friend Heidi looks great in them. In fact I have a thing about them as gifts....they often are what I think of for a child's cold head. I see all children's heads as cold.....Caps and hats are symbols of something but reading tonight showed me how rich that association really can be from lucky hats to hats doffed to declare a run for President. It's a magical hat day for Sarah.....
But I had no idea the depth when I started my hat investigation. ......
So first I found a hat making project.
It is really about anxiety and depression awareness called the Blue Hat Project.
It has a week in which hat-making and wearing in fascinating ways promotes not only an awareness of depression and associated anxiety but something to do to kind of ..well...help...
I hadn't thought before about "hats" quite like this but idiomatically they are so rich.The Blue Hat Project was conceived by Waltraud Reiner, a milliner with personal experience of depression and a wish to use the creativity behind hat design as a means of raising awareness of depression in the community.The project aims to:
BUT WHY I WAS INTERESTED IS.......HERE....
- Provide people with a creative outlet through hat making and wearing hats thus promoting positive focus and support for dealing with, or overcoming some forms of depression.
- Provide the opportunity to exhibit blue hats made and donated by people for display and subsequent auction to raise awareness for beyond blue the national depression initiative.
- Provide a platform for people to deal with depression by talking about and becoming aware of the work of beyondblue.
Do you wear any of these hats every day:
Friend, lover, wife, mum, nurse, taxi driver, husband, dad, painter, woodworker, ceramicist, metal worker, artist.
Asking what "hats" one wears in a day, of course a fascinating place to spend some time considering. My "hats" in that sense today included:
teacher, mother, friend, listener, pseudo-nurse, wife, umm...special friend, writer, cook, shopper, driver, customer, repentant library patron, caller, worrier, dreamer, goof-off, patient and maybe on another level....just a person trying to make it through another Day in A Life.
That of course made me want to look idiomatically at hat...cap, "in French mon chapeau"...thinking of course of this song from the Cat In The Hat....and a very old video I show every year.

So looking at idioms I found all kinds of hat related lines of thought....
be talking through your hat (old-fashioned, informal)
be wearing your [teacher's/lawyer's etc.] hat
come/go cap in hand (British, American & Australian, American)
hang up your hat
hats off to someone
I take my hat off to someone (British, American & Australian, American)
I'll eat my hat (old-fashioned)
If the cap fits (wear it). (British, American & Australian, American)
keep something under your hat
old hat
pass the hat around/round
pull a rabbit out of the hat
throw/toss your hat in the ring (American & Australian)
Cambridge International Dictionary of Idioms © Cambridge University Press 1998
No matter what I do, can't find a huge translation table.
How about HAT QUOTES. Here is a wonderful collection from a very unique site Hat Shapers.com
But trying to find that simple thing, I run across The Language Hat an extraordinary site that examines language and it's origins. I hope I hold this thought long enough to link while I continue my hats searching.
Then I found a funny hat......well...look at your own risk. Ever watch the movie The Closet, French? You should, it's a great comedy. You'll be glad you did.....trust me.

Yes, I really am going to talk about that classic Caps For Sale.......and no I haven't been nipping the sherry. Though I'm wheezing so badly I'm considering doing that.

I'm a first grade teacher and this I counted today as "Math reasoning." We counted caps.
Let's see....the history aspect.
Caps For Sale predates most of those handsome fellows I see wearing these caps out in the world...it has a Wiki...saying in part,
"A Tale of a Peddler, Some Monkeys and Their Monkey Business is a 1938 classic children's book by Esphyr Slobodkina. It's a sly take on the saying, "Monkey see, monkey do."
Based on a folktale, the story follows the life of a mustachioed cap salesman who wears his entire stock of caps on his head -- seventeen in all, as depicted on the title page (including his own cap). He strolls through towns and villages chanting, "Caps! Caps for sale! Fifty cents a cap!"
It's an exciting plot line, as I'm sure the traveling cap business is filled with the wonder of new customers and far away places. He even manages to be a bit hungry from a poor sales day just to let us in on the reality of village to village promotion.
Myself, I favor the colors used in the book( turquoise, orange, red, mustard yellow, gold, brown) which I can only say are as period as the entire thing...folk tradition for sure.
Oh, and I like the checkered caps. And the stacking on the head to avoid a cart, genius.
My class preferred red caps. They prefer purple but it wasn't a choice...Like all good stories there are inevitable complications, poor sales, a rest under a tree (hey we have a tree story in our theme so good tie in) and then of course the town monkeys dive in to give some nice monkey business with their cap-naping ways. And I about fell asleep mid-story for dramatic and sleep-waking effect. I always dozed reading it to my kids it was a nice replay of those fading days.
I read the story as a child, surely just think Scholastic book club, heck my Mom probably read the story as a twelve year old or whatever she was to her baby brother. It's been around awhile. My current class loves mocking and teasing so of course they thought the story was great. But my money was entirely with the peddlar. His disgust is my disgust. My class had 100% identification with the monkeys. I never, ever identified with the "tsk, tsk, tsk" monkeys.
I asked my class what else he could do to get his caps back from the monkeys in the tree before the page where he does get them back a bit worse for wear but in shape and one child I will call Andrew yelled out, "He can take out his gun and shoot them all dead."
It's that kind of a year.
So after another 15 minutes in which I then tried to figure that out and make "my kids and guns and school talk" speech off they went happily into their hood. Ah....you wonder what Slobodkina might make of a book that has sold more than 2 million copies.She must have been amazed. I am. Pretty amazing that caps can generate that kind of cool.
Then Janet, Dad's third wife and a DEAR friend, artist, dancer, quilter extraodinaire wrote, sending me this under the title Purple Hats which just came ..Just now..
Purple Hats
In honor of women's history month and in memory of Erma Bombeck who lost her
fight with cancer. Here is an "angel" sent to watch over you.
IF I HAD MY LIFE TO LIVE OVER - by Erma Bombeck
(written after she found out she was dying from cancer).
I would have gone to bed when I was sick instead of pretending the earth
would go into a holding pattern if I weren't there for the day.
I would have burned the pink candle sculpted like a rose before it melted in
storage.
I would have talked less and listened more.
I would have invited friends over to dinner even if the carpet was stained,
or the sofa faded.
I would have...it goes on...but I think better to catch the drift...do it now.......
And then my hat-tricks took me to memory of Oliver Sack's story about The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat.
I'm a fascinated thinker about proprioception.
In part because mine works with irregular glee reminding me that what you think you know, is really a state of mind which can be instantaneously rearranged. (David Bohm especially interesting to read...)I have through neurological dysfunction learned enough to say that my hat really is in my hand.
This story of Sacks, like all of his books about the brain, is fascinating. Today I know a hat took me all the way from here to there. With no time to keep editing and playing I have to boil ten dozen eggs to dye tomorrow with a class....So, yes, funny things are everywhere.
And sometimes my fun is thinking about someone wearing a nice cap and looking like a bit of magic. I can see it. Really.
Hey!! Was it you that was asking me about the government grants website? well anyway, here it is... Grants I'm headed back to Cali this weekend, gotta get warm! :)
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