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Asian conical hat

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Rice farmer in northern Cambodia wearing a straw hat.

The conical hat, sedge hat, rice hat, paddy hat or coolie hat is a simple style of straw hat originating in East and Southeast Asia, particularly Vietnam, China, and Japan. It has a conical shape and is kept on the head by a cloth (often silk) chin strap; an internal band of the same material keeps the hat itself from resting on the wearer's head. Conical hats are used primarily as protection from the sun and rain. When made of straw or matting, it can be dipped in water and worn as an impromptu evaporative-cooling device.

Because of its distinctive shape, it is used often in the depiction of East Asians. In recent years, the hat made an appearance in a t-shirt series by Abercrombie & Fitch, which came under fire for allegedly racist caricatured depictions of Asians.[1]

Recently, as part of international one day cricket matches in Australia, the conical hat has been a fashion phenomenon amongst spectators with many decorated in Australian green and gold livery. Given that spectators are exposed for long periods in direct sunlight, the conical hat is a logical sunsafe device.

In Japan, the hat is called sugegasa (菅笠). In mainland China and Taiwan, it is called dǒu lì (斗笠; literally, a one-dǒu bamboo hat). The Vietnamese name is Nón lá (leaf hat).

The "Coolie Hat" switch found on many aircraft throttle and stick controls takes its name from this hat, which is shaped similarly.

See also

References

  1. ^ Strasburg, Jenny (2002-04-18). "ABERCROMBIE & GLITCH: Asian Americans rip retailer for stereotypes on T-shirts". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2007-05-05. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)