Cap: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
m →See also: moved to disambig |
→Types of caps: Removed "Salary Cap" ... ha ha. |
||
Line 34: | Line 34: | ||
* [[Nurse cap]] |
* [[Nurse cap]] |
||
* [[Patrol cap]] |
* [[Patrol cap]] |
||
* [[Salary cap]] |
|||
* [[Shako]] |
* [[Shako]] |
||
* [[Square academic cap]] |
* [[Square academic cap]] |
Revision as of 09:06, 11 May 2008
A cap is a form of headgear. Caps have crowns that fit closer than hats and have no brim or only a visor. They are typically designed for warmth and, when including a visor, blocking sunlight from the eyes.
Types of caps
- Ascot cap
- Baseball cap
- Beanie
- Beret
- Biretta
- Cap of Maintenance
- Civil air patrol
- Civil War cap (also known as rebel cap)
- Coif
- Combination cap (also known as service cap)
- Cricket cap
- Current "Cap" Count
- Do-rag
- Dutch cap
- Engineer cap
- Fiddler cap (also known as Dutch Boy)
- Flat cap
- Garrison cap
- Greek fisherman's cap
- International cap
- John Lennon cap
- Kepi
- Kippah (also known as yarmulke)
- Muir cap
- Newsboy cap
- Nightcap
- Nurse cap
- Patrol cap
- Shako
- Square academic cap
- Tam
- Tam o'shanter
- Tubeteika
- Tuque or Stocking cap
- Welder's cap
- Yachting cap
- Zucchetto
See also
External links
- My Kingdom for a Crown: An Around-the-World History of the Skullcap and its Modern Socio-Political Significance, by Reverend Antonio Hernandez (pdf) -- a thorough history of the skullcap, with chapters on the yarmulke and the beanie among others.