I think a baseball game, where everyone wore cowboy hats & lariats were allowed. would be more fun to watch! Willie Mays
The fascinator A fascinator is a headpiece, a style of millinery, originally a form of lightweight knitted head-covering. Since the 1990s the term refers to a type of formal headwear worn as an alternative to the hat; it is usually a large decorative design attached to a band or clip, sometimes incorporating a base to resemble a hat, in which case it may be called a hatinator. During the 1920s, American flappers wore headbands to complete the bobbed hair look. They decorated the bands with brooches, jewelry or feathers. A hatinator
Beth, your post reminded me of the old shell game (three shells and a pea). See post in another thread HERE
Abraham Lincoln’s Top Hat: The Inside Story "When Lincoln gave his famous speech at the Cooper Institute in New York in February of 1860, some observers were quoted as saying that his hat looked bashed in." "But this is unlikely. As the biographer Harold Holzer points out, Lincoln, the very day of his speech, bought a new top hat from Knox Great Hat and Cap at 212 Broadway." "His suit fit poorly, his boots hurt his feet, but when he gave his speech in his stovepipe, says Holzer, “at least he would look taller than any man in the city.”