In an amusing anecdote from Tropic of Cancer, Henry Miller mentions his drunken buddy wearing his hat “assways” when they stumbled into a church.
I think the essence (if not the literal word) of the OP is when the idea of wearing a hat backwards as a fashion statement originated. Like others, I have very little doubt that wearing a hat backwards for practical purposes has been around for a long time.
There’s a very good point here. Is it always the case that a hat has a “front” and a “back”, or do only some styles of hat have a recognized front half and back half? If there is a distinction, who set or sets the rules? GQ Magazine? Some medieval tailors’ guild? The king? Your mom?
Another amusing tale of hats changing direction: there was a case of a group that changed how they wore their hats in the 12th century, and not just for style reasons:
- Pope-Pourri: What You Don’t Remember From Catholic School
I am shocked and astonished that on this board, the most basic of questions has not been extensively addressed - what constitutes a hat? Head covering protecting from the sun? Something like this would qualify. I’m sure that sometime in the multi-millennial span of ancient Egyptian civilization, some with-it dude took it upon himself to wear the nemes backwards, with a Uraeus cocked jauntily to the side, to enhance his standing with the ladies, thereby rendering his choice a stylistic one.
Strictly as a style choice, check out this 1938 photo of the Brooklyn Dodgers clowning around.
Probably not the same hats, though. A fore-and-aft bicorne may have different-sized or -shaped brims front and back, while a hat to be worn athwart is balanced. Placement of straps, cockades and badges is different. More to the point, perhaps, they were generally (as in the Napoleonic era) worn as an element of uniform, so the mode would be dictated by the wearer’s service and rank.
Backwards is nothing, in the Middle Ages, it became fashionable to wear your chaperon (hood with looooong tail) by sticking your head into the face-hole and wearing it as a hat. And that’s the way most people think of it being worn, as that’s what features in Late Medieval art. But it’s the same basic construction as the earlier hood.
Since this is a zombie, I’ll post a video of how to remove a ball cap (a bit of bad language).
For a while in the 1980s, anyone at my school who wore their cap backwards to look cool was mocked as a wannabe “Axl Rose.” I am sure he copied the look from LA street gangs.
nm