How to Use a Hatpin

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  • Опубликовано: 20 май 2015
  • How to Use a Hatpin. Part of the series: All About Hats. Hatpins add detail to hats, making them more seasonally appropriate or coordinating them with a specific outfit. Learn how to use a hatpin with the help of a fashion expert in this free video. Read more: www.ehow.com/video_7876608_use...
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Комментарии • 30

  • @goosalator
    @goosalator 8 лет назад +83

    Nope nope nope. That is a decorative pin for a hat, not a hat pin

    • @morganolfursson2560
      @morganolfursson2560 4 года назад +4

      This was my answer to the lady on the video
      A hat pin is supposed to secure your hat to your head by pinning it to your hairdo so it does't fall when you walk or gets blown away by the wind, because the original hat pin was used at a time women wore the tightest corsets, and when you wore a corset it was impossible to pick up anything from the ground as you couldn't bend this low down, so avoiding having to pick up your hat was primordial. Also streets were extremely filthy in those days since it was a time when horse carriages were used for transport (manure everywhere) and before the invention of the toilets and sewage system, so needless to say that if your hat fell on the ground, you neither physically could nor wanted to pick it up and put it back on your head. For this reason, the hat pin was created to help woman (and men since both used them) secure the hat to the hairdo.
      Also the 18th , 19th (especially late 19th early 29th) century were a time were women's hat were so ridiculously bug and extravagant, you actually need a pin, several even to secure them. Women wore up to 5 pins for a single hat, resulting in many injuries, not only to the person wearing them but the people around them because the pointy end of the pins often protruded in every direction. Women were sometimes not even allowed to wear them on public transport and they were forbidden in court as women could use them to stab people (this is due to a famous episode with the suffragettes in England). Actually hat pins may have saved the life and virtue of many women as they did often use them as a weapon against aggressors.
      And finally , interestingly enough, the hat pin was not a British or French invention as many people think, but the reuse of something far more exotic, since those pins made there entrance into the fashion accessories world in europe , from japan , especially during the Japonisme art movement when wearing or using anything Japanese was all the rage, particularly following the Paris Exopisiton Universelle of 1867 when Japan made its big entrance into the modern world. These pins were originally called Tama Kanzashi or Just Kanzashi and were used in Japan as hair ornament. Women in Europe wanted to wear them but already wore hats and this is the combination or the Japanese hair ornament and the social necessity for European women to wear hats in public which gave birth to the hat pin.
      What you are presenting, is called a decorative hat brooch not a hat pin and the hat brooch came later and was particularly used by Gabrielle Chanel when she opened her first hat store in Deauville in the 1910s during the birth of the belle epoque.
      Fashion PR firm you said, so you studied fashion and you do not know the difference between a hat pin and a hat brooch ?
      I understand that you are American and , well,... the nation of tommy hilfiger and ralph lauren (enough said) so i can't shouldn't expect much, but I am just a veterinarian who hasn't studied fashion and i seem to know a little more about fashion than this South Carolinian fashion PR thing you seem to be the spokesperson for . Not knowing your topic is definitely not the greatest PR by the way .
      This being said, I have no merit I am British and French and my grand mother still uses both hat pins and hat brooches so i have known the difference since i was a little kid having tea with her on the week ends, as she would use a different pin or brooch every time i met her and would have new ones commissioned constantly.
      You are truly gorgeous and have natural elegance , and you wear this wool felt french beret very beautifully, but you are yet to be fully versed in fashion and its history. And unless you study the history of fashion you won't understand fashion.

    • @AmetafJohora
      @AmetafJohora 4 года назад

      Morgan Olfursson thanks for this thorough comment

    • @lunatonkens7933
      @lunatonkens7933 3 года назад

      @@morganolfursson2560 Thanks! This was very interesting :)

  • @KathrineJKozachok
    @KathrineJKozachok 8 лет назад +34

    I was born in the US and have never seen a hat ornament referred to as a hatpin. I was looking for a video on hatpins - was not expecting this. Anyone who needs a video on how to pin a decoration on a hat probably shouldn't be allowed to dress themselves! LOL

  • @stellashimpy4021
    @stellashimpy4021 8 лет назад +22

    Huh. You should probably re-title this video or take it down. As pointed out by others, this is not demonstrating how to use a hat pin, it is demonstrating how to decorate a hat with a pin.

  • @rosiedhoopun6594
    @rosiedhoopun6594 9 лет назад +12

    That's not a hatpin! A hatpin helps to keep the hat on your head.

  • @VegansFromMars
    @VegansFromMars 8 лет назад +19

    This had nothing to do with using an actual hat pin.

  • @MSEDzirasa2015
    @MSEDzirasa2015 9 лет назад +25

    Now I know hat pins mean something else in the US...
    Isn't a hat pin supposed to help keep your hat secured to your head by being attached to the hair? I knew I should have watched a British video on this particular tutorial. :(

    • @morganolfursson2560
      @morganolfursson2560 4 года назад +2

      You bloody well should .Just kidding
      This was my answer to the lady on the video
      A hat pin is supposed to secure your hat to your head by pinning it to your hairdo so it does't fall when you walk or gets blown away by the wind, because the original hat pin was used at a time women wore the tightest corsets, and when you wore a corset it was impossible to pick up anything from the ground as you couldn't bend this low down, so avoiding having to pick up your hat was primordial. Also streets were extremely filthy in those days since it was a time when horse carriages were used for transport (manure everywhere) and before the invention of the toilets and sewage system, so needless to say that if your hat fell on the ground, you neither physically could nor wanted to pick it up and put it back on your head. For this reason, the hat pin was created to help woman (and men since both used them) secure the hat to the hairdo.
      Also the 18th , 19th (especially late 19th early 29th) century were a time were women's hat were so ridiculously bug and extravagant, you actually need a pin, several even to secure them. Women wore up to 5 pins for a single hat, resulting in many injuries, not only to the person wearing them but the people around them because the pointy end of the pins often protruded in every direction. Women were sometimes not even allowed to wear them on public transport and they were forbidden in court as women could use them to stab people (this is due to a famous episode with the suffragettes in England). Actually hat pins may have saved the life and virtue of many women as they did often use them as a weapon against aggressors.
      And finally , interestingly enough, the hat pin was not a British or French invention as many people think, but the reuse of something far more exotic, since those pins made there entrance into the fashion accessories world in europe , from japan , especially during the Japonisme art movement when wearing or using anything Japanese was all the rage, particularly following the Paris Exopisiton Universelle of 1867 when Japan made its big entrance into the modern world. These pins were originally called Tama Kanzashi or Just Kanzashi and were used in Japan as hair ornament. Women in Europe wanted to wear them but already wore hats and this is the combination or the Japanese hair ornament and the social necessity for European women to wear hats in public which gave birth to the hat pin.
      What you are presenting, is called a decorative hat brooch not a hat pin and the hat brooch came later and was particularly used by Gabrielle Chanel when she opened her first hat store in Deauville in the 1910s during the birth of the belle epoque.
      Fashion PR firm you said, so you studied fashion and you do not know the difference between a hat pin and a hat brooch ?
      I understand that you are American and , well,... the nation of tommy hilfiger and ralph lauren (enough said) so i can't shouldn't expect much, but I am just a veterinarian who hasn't studied fashion and i seem to know a little more about fashion than this South Carolinian fashion PR thing you seem to be the spokesperson for . Not knowing your topic is definitely not the greatest PR by the way .
      This being said, I have no merit I am British and French and my grand mother still uses both hat pins and hat brooches so i have known the difference since i was a little kid having tea with her on the week ends, as she would use a different pin or brooch every time i met her and would have new ones commissioned constantly.
      You are truly gorgeous and have natural elegance , and you wear this wool felt french beret very beautifully, but you are yet to be fully versed in fashion and its history. And unless you study the history of fashion you won't understand fashion.

  • @debbiedoo8409
    @debbiedoo8409 8 лет назад +18

    I think that is a pin not a hat pin. Hat pins are long and straight and you poke them through the hat into your hair so the hat will stay on.

  • @thefacepaintlady
    @thefacepaintlady 6 лет назад +3

    Good lord

  • @user-lz6dm5lk9y
    @user-lz6dm5lk9y 3 месяца назад

    I thought hat pins were meant to hold hats on your head. I love hats, but some of the hats I have worn do not stay on very well, especially if the weather is blustery.

  • @morganolfursson2560
    @morganolfursson2560 4 года назад +4

    A hat pin is supposed to secure your hat to your head by pinning it to your hairdo so it does't fall when you walk or gets blown away by the wind, because the original hat pin was used at a time women wore the tightest corsets, and when you wore a corset it was impossible to pick up anything from the ground as you couldn't bend this low down, so avoiding having to pick up your hat was primordial. Also streets were extremely filthy in those days since it was a time when horse carriages were used for transport (manure everywhere) and before the invention of the toilets and sewage system, so needless to say that if your hat fell on the ground, you neither physically could nor wanted to pick it up and put it back on your head. For this reason, the hat pin was created to help woman (and men since both used them) secure the hat to the hairdo.
    Also the 18th , 19th (especially late 19th early 29th) century were a time were women's hat were so ridiculously bug and extravagant, you actually need a pin, several even to secure them. Women wore up to 5 pins for a single hat, resulting in many injuries, not only to the person wearing them but the people around them because the pointy end of the pins often protruded in every direction. Women were sometimes not even allowed to wear them on public transport and they were forbidden in court as women could use them to stab people (this is due to a famous episode with the suffragettes in England). Actually hat pins may have saved the life and virtue of many women as they did often use them as a weapon against aggressors.
    And finally , interestingly enough, the hat pin was not a British or French invention as many people think, but the reuse of something far more exotic, since those pins made there entrance into the fashion accessories world in europe , from japan , especially during the Japonisme art movement when wearing or using anything Japanese was all the rage, particularly following the Paris Exopisiton Universelle of 1867 when Japan made its big entrance into the modern world. These pins were originally called Tama Kanzashi or Just Kanzashi and were used in Japan as hair ornament. Women in Europe wanted to wear them but already wore hats and this is the combination or the Japanese hair ornament and the social necessity for European women to wear hats in public which gave birth to the hat pin.
    What you are presenting, is called a decorative hat brooch not a hat pin and the hat brooch came later and was particularly used by Gabrielle Chanel when she opened her first hat store in Deauville in the 1910s during the birth of the belle epoque.
    Fashion PR firm you said, so you studied fashion and you do not know the difference between a hat pin and a hat brooch ?
    I understand that you are American and , well,... the nation of tommy hilfiger and ralph lauren (enough said) so i can't shouldn't expect much, but I am just a veterinarian who hasn't studied fashion and i seem to know a little more about fashion than this South Carolinian fashion PR thing you seem to be the spokesperson for . Not knowing your topic is definitely not the greatest PR by the way .
    This being said, I have no merit I am British and French and my grand mother still uses both hat pins and hat brooches so i have known the difference since i was a little kid having tea with her on the week ends, as she would use a different pin or brooch every time i met her and would have new ones commissioned constantly.
    You are truly gorgeous and have natural elegance , and you wear this wool felt french beret very beautifully, but you are yet to be fully versed in fashion and its history. And unless you study the history of fashion you won't understand fashion.

    • @Sputterbugz
      @Sputterbugz Год назад

      lmao the beginning of this isnt true at all. women could and still do all sorts of things in corsets. you can literally exercise in a corset. the pin was just something to fasten the hat to your head.
      look up Prior Attire on here, she details what exercises she does in corsets. i personally wear them too and can bend over and tie my shoes. it makes it more difficult but it isnt impossible. also bend at the knees, not the waist.
      also hair pins existed in china before they existed in korea or japan. they originate in ancient china, rome, and greece.

  • @BaronesaDeSantos
    @BaronesaDeSantos 3 года назад +1

    I googled "how to ear a hatpin" because I need it to keep an 18th century hat I'm making on my head (and 18th century hats don't stay in your hat for a singe second without it) and I get How to Put a Decorative Pin on your hat...

  • @idontextback
    @idontextback 4 года назад +1

    Are you reading your comments? The bow is not a hatpin. It's a bow that is attached to a pin.

    • @morganolfursson2560
      @morganolfursson2560 4 года назад

      This is my answer to the lady in the video
      A hat pin is supposed to secure your hat to your head by pinning it to your hairdo so it does't fall when you walk or gets blown away by the wind, because the original hat pin was used at a time women wore the tightest corsets, and when you wore a corset it was impossible to pick up anything from the ground as you couldn't bend this low down, so avoiding having to pick up your hat was primordial. Also streets were extremely filthy in those days since it was a time when horse carriages were used for transport (manure everywhere) and before the invention of the toilets and sewage system, so needless to say that if your hat fell on the ground, you neither physically could nor wanted to pick it up and put it back on your head. For this reason, the hat pin was created to help woman (and men since both used them) secure the hat to the hairdo.
      Also the 18th , 19th (especially late 19th early 29th) century were a time were women's hat were so ridiculously bug and extravagant, you actually need a pin, several even to secure them. Women wore up to 5 pins for a single hat, resulting in many injuries, not only to the person wearing them but the people around them because the pointy end of the pins often protruded in every direction. Women were sometimes not even allowed to wear them on public transport and they were forbidden in court as women could use them to stab people (this is due to a famous episode with the suffragettes in England). Actually hat pins may have saved the life and virtue of many women as they did often use them as a weapon against aggressors.
      And finally , interestingly enough, the hat pin was not a British or French invention as many people think, but the reuse of something far more exotic, since those pins made there entrance into the fashion accessories world in europe , from japan , especially during the Japonisme art movement when wearing or using anything Japanese was all the rage, particularly following the Paris Exopisiton Universelle of 1867 when Japan made its big entrance into the modern world. These pins were originally called Tama Kanzashi or Just Kanzashi and were used in Japan as hair ornament. Women in Europe wanted to wear them but already wore hats and this is the combination or the Japanese hair ornament and the social necessity for European women to wear hats in public which gave birth to the hat pin.
      What you are presenting, is called a decorative hat brooch not a hat pin and the hat brooch came later and was particularly used by Gabrielle Chanel when she opened her first hat store in Deauville in the 1910s during the birth of the belle epoque.
      Fashion PR firm you said, so you studied fashion and you do not know the difference between a hat pin and a hat brooch ?
      I understand that you are American and , well,... the nation of tommy hilfiger and ralph lauren (enough said) so i can't shouldn't expect much, but I am just a veterinarian who hasn't studied fashion and i seem to know a little more about fashion than this South Carolinian fashion PR thing you seem to be the spokesperson for . Not knowing your topic is definitely not the greatest PR by the way .
      This being said, I have no merit I am British and French and my grand mother still uses both hat pins and hat brooches so i have known the difference since i was a little kid having tea with her on the week ends, as she would use a different pin or brooch every time i met her and would have new ones commissioned constantly.
      You are truly gorgeous and have natural elegance , and you wear this wool felt french beret very beautifully, but you are yet to be fully versed in fashion and its history. And unless you study the history of fashion you won't understand fashion.

  • @Kaletiel
    @Kaletiel 4 года назад +2

    that's a brooch on a hat, not a hatpin.

  • @quiksilvababe
    @quiksilvababe 6 лет назад +1

    This aint a hat pin, what?? Or just use a safety pin

  • @1theatrechick
    @1theatrechick 4 месяца назад

    I love the idea of attaching a decoration to a hat pin, but this is not the proper way to use a hat pin. They are meant for securing the hat so it doesn’t fall off.

  • @anonymousanonymous9572
    @anonymousanonymous9572 8 лет назад +6

    lol wtf is this

  • @ChoateLife
    @ChoateLife Год назад

    This is not how to use a hat pin. This is how to use a pin to add an accessory to a hat.

  • @quilamiller5652
    @quilamiller5652 3 года назад +2

    Sorry sister... you need to take this down. #misinformation

  • @suzannedawson4120
    @suzannedawson4120 4 года назад +1

    Careful about representing a fashion firm with inaccurate terminology. That’s not a hat pin!

  • @clovergreenpearl2k302
    @clovergreenpearl2k302 2 года назад

    Ugh. Clueless 🤦🏻‍♀️