What was the “pith” in a helmet?

What is “pith”?

(No, I don’t have a lisp. :stuck_out_tongue: )

Apparently, part of the shola tree, though some helmets of that style might actually be made of other substances:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sholapith

The were made using “sola pith”. They were very popular because they air conditioned the head. Know by several names including “sola topee”.

With apologies for the non PC language, although I think Noel Coward was being ironic.

Originally, the term referred to the material. Later the term referred more to the style.

Shola (pith) was used for arts and craft long before the Brits discovered it. In fact, the traditional wedding attire for Bengali bride and grooms include head gear made of Shola. I wore it during my wedding.

It feels very much like styrofoam but is lighter and breathes. It’s mistakenly called the pith but it is just the woody part of the plant.

Interesting. I have often seen that written as “solar topee,” which I assumed referred to its protection from the sun. Wiki identifies that as folk etymology.

I have a modern pith helmet, made in Vietnam. It’s cloth covered on both inside and out, and is about 3/8" to 1/2" thick. It’s light and rigid. Because my head is more oval than most, it was digging in at my brow and the back of my head, so I figured that I’d shave some material away in those places and get a look at the inside of the helmet to boot.

I peeled the fabric away from the inside of the helmet, and used a hooked knife to pare away some of the pith. My helmet is made up of multiple pieced layers of material, each about an eighth of an inch thick, glued in laminations to form the final shape. The individual layers of ‘pith’ look like foamier balsa wood or a styrofoam meat tray, and were white with darker specks. There was also a strip of cardstock reinforcing the brim/dome joint. I don’t know exactly what species of plant my helmet was made of, but it cuts and crushes pretty easily. I shaved away about a layer and a half from the front and back, and reinforced that area with some very tough mulberry paper glued over the cuts. I then glued the fabric liner back down, and the helmet fit perfectly.

The version that I have also has a floating suspension system, with a semirigid headband that connects to the helmet at four small points, leaving lots of space for air to circulate between the head and helmet: very much like a hard hat.

Topi or Topee means hat in many Indian languages.

On the other hand, I have never seen it written as sola toupee. :slight_smile:

On the third hand, “solar toupee” has 236 google hits.

The History Guy has a decent Youtube video on pith helmets:

Noel Cowards song is actually better than the quote above suggests:

It’s such a surprise for the Eastern eyes to see
That though the English are effete
They’re quite impervious to heat
When the white man rides every native hides in glee
Because the simple creatures hope he
Will impale his solar topee on a tree

Fascinating!

Thanks for the replies, everyone. I’ve learned muchly.

Ha! Stick that in your kepi.

I knew someone was going to make a pithy comment in this thread sooner or later.

Tut, tut, sir! A kepi is made of wool, not pith, and unless you attach a havelock to the back of it, it provides very little protection from the sun.

Whereas a piss cutter offers no protection whatsoever.

The Kenya Expanded Programme on Immunisation provides protection from

Tuberculosis, Polio, Hepatitis B, HIB, OPV, Diptheria, Pertussis, Tetenus, Rotavirus, Pneumonia, Measles, Yellow fever and Vitamin A Deficiency.

I don’t recognise “sun”, is it some kind of French term?

Care in the spelling of headwear is definitely warranted. For example, you should avoid wearing a baklava, or eating a balaclava.

I learnt in a thread about a year ago that some Americans wear toboggans on their heads in the winter.

I remain impressed by their sense of balance.