Summary
Hat of teal felt - sailor or fedora shape, with flat top. Made in New Zealand by 'James'; hood is stamped 'Moreton, France'.
Part of a collection of hats ordered and worn by Lorna Waller (1912-1997), an artist and aesthete. The collection represented the avant-garde of fashion from 1940s Melbourne. Some of the hats were made locally, and some were imported.
Millinery styles varied enormously between the late 1930s and the early 1950s. In the late 1930s, Salvador Dali and other Surrealists had a dynamic impact on the range of hat shapes. The onset of World War II resulted in a shortage of materials to make hats, so trimmings were used to create an upbeat mood in the face of hardship. Towards the end of the War, restraint was the key look, and the turban was again popular. Later, gaiety prevailed and, with it, feathers were back.
Born in New Zealand, Lorna travelled overseas when young and settled in Melbourne. While at the National Gallery School in the mid-1930s, she took up with her teacher, the artist Napier Waller. They did not marry until 1954, when his first wife died. An independent income enabled Lorna to maintain an apartment in Spring Street, decorated in a bohemian style. The leopard skin prints and slacks she once wore to the Lyceum Clu proved too much for conservative Melbourne: she was told to go home and change.
Physical Description
Hat - teal felt hood, sailor shape; hand blocked with flat top. Trimmed with same felt around base of crown. Flat bow at back. Teal felt ties and stiffened edge on brim.
More Information
-
Collecting Areas
-
Acquisition Information
Donation from Ms Anthea Mereweather, 18 Dec 2001
-
Place & Date Made
New Zealand, 1970-1979
Date based on appearance. -
User (Probable)
-
Inscriptions
Text on tag: A James Hat/MADE IN N.Z. Hood stamped: Moreton/ France
-
Classification
-
Category
-
Discipline
-
Type of item
-
Overall Dimensions
16 cm (Width), 30 cm (Depth), 14 cm (Height)
-
References
Text regarding Lorna Waller and history of millinery drawn from exhbiition label draft in sup-file, dated 22/10/2002.
-
Keywords