by Donna Hatch
www.donnahatch.com
My latest foray into the research geekdom took me
slightly out of the Regency Era, but since I love all kinds of old things, I
decided to indulge in this new direction and share with you my latest discovery: hatpins.
To quote Wikipedia: A hatpin is a decorative and functional pin for holding a hat to the head, usually by the hair. In Western Culture, a hatpin is almost solely a female item and is often worn in
a pair.
The description made me smile since I can't imagine anyone using a pin to fasten their hat to their head! Obviously, it attached to their hair :-)
In as
early as the 1400’s, proper, and, I might add, probably only fairly wealthy
ladies, used pins to secure their wimples and veils onto their heads. By the
early 1800’s, ladies used them to keep their hats in place. Hatpins ranged in
length from six to twelve inches and were made from a variety of metals
including brass, copper, sterling silver, gold, or gold or
silver wash, and often had a decorated head. Naturally, they had to be
made by hand, which made them hard to find. In England, demand caused importers
to bring hatpins from France. Apparently Parliament became alarmed at the threat
to the delicate balance between import and export, so they passed a law
restricting the import of pins to January 1st and 2nd. Supposedly ladies saved their money all year to have
enough to purchase. Some believe this is the source of the term "pin
money." Other sources claim pin money came from the beginning of each tax she
supposedly used to pay for her pins. However, I have always held fast to the
popular Regency belief that ladies spent pin money to pay for pins used to
fasten their gowns together, since buttons and hooks weren’t as common as
modern people believe. Since the pins were made of metal, non-stainless steel,
they eventually rusted and had to be replaced.
Regardless,
hatpins remained a popular and necessary accessory into the 1920's. Eventually
in America, laws restricted the length of hat pins since they could be used as
a deadly weapon so women had to cut them down to the maximum length.
Eventually, hatpins became mass produced, making them more
readily available to the poorer classes with
very simple heads. Of course, the
wealthy always had fun hatpin heads made from materials such as, according to the American Hatpin Society:
Carnival glass,
rhinestones, hand blown molded glass, micro mosaic, or hand painted or
transferred porcelain like the Japanese Satsuma. There were also hatpins made
with ivory, emeralds, stone, amber, tortoise shell, jet, celluloid and other
plastics, mother of pearl, and coral.
Hatpins spanned
many styles including Baroque, Etruscan Revival, Greek Revival, Egyptian
Revival, Oriental influence, Arts and
Crafts, Art Nouveau and even Art Deco,
before waning around WW1 when metals became scarce and hats got smaller.
I was horrified to find in the picture to the right, a hatpin made in the shape of a swastika. However, the hatpins in this pincushion show a good variety of the many different styles of hatpins available. Today, hatpins are collectible items and there is
an American Hatpin Society and The Hat Pin Society of Great Britain for modern enthusiasts.
Now that I know of their existence, I think I’ll
have to write a scene in my next Regency historical romance novel where my
heroine uses a hatpin to defend herself from a bad guy.
3 comments:
Hello my friend how are you? really I like your post keep in touch from INDONESIA.
Whenever I think of hatpins, I'm reminded of a line from "My Fair Lady" (or "Pygmalion" by George Bernard Shaw), where Eliza Doolittle is at the Ascot Races trying out her ability to pronounce words with a correct accent - but has no idea about proper topics of conversation - and speaks of an aunt that she believes was killed: "Them she lived with would have killed her for a hatpin, let alone a hat!"
(Here's a clip from the movie with this reference in it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8uozGujfdS0)
And for an additional scene of the Ascot Races from "My Fair Lady", which features plenty of elaborate hats (and, no doubt, hundreds of hatpins!) watch this clip from YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5Sq1Pax7h8
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