Black and white

by Hattingdon Staff

The following are ten Hattingdon® fashion hats with the chic individuality of the simple palette of black and white. It is a wide range of fun designs and shows what an eclectic designer Mrs Farrell is. She so loves doing them.

Roxie is her particular favourite, followed by Filamena from Hattingdon’s lampshade hat series. Remember them? She also adores Ellery. The Cadence and Delores designs are the top sellers in this group.

Who are your favourites?

Roxie

Roxie Hattingdon.
Roxie.

Zara

Zara Hattingdon.
Zara.

Cadence

Cadence.

Ellery

Ellery Hattingdon.
Ellery.

Anita

Anita cross-band turban in black. Hattingdon Horses.
Anita.

Filamena

Filamena.

Aimee

Aimee.

Delores

Delores Hattingdon.
Delores.

Greta

Greta.

Bonnie Ooh La La

Bonnie Ooh La La

Come back and see us again soon!

Hattingdon H Logo in her signature brown.

© Vivian J. Grant.

4th July 2020

Hattingdon has a new hat silhouette called “Elise”. Mrs Farrell decorated it in the stars and stripes of the American flag for Independence Day.

Elise hat in red, white and blue.

Hugs and kisses, and millinery blisses.


Hattingdon H Logo in her signature brown.

© Vivian J. Grant.

Simone

Inspired by one of the 2020 summer season’s hottest colours, here’s Hattingdon modeling her most recent hat, done in a gloriously chic saffron yellow, embellished with hand stitching and a fashionably large all white-butterfly. Hattingdon named this new hat Simone. Enjoy!

Hugs and kisses, and millinery blisses.


Hattingdon H Logo in her signature brown.

©Vivian Grant.

Updated Jan. 23, 2023.

Cinco de Mayo and Fiesta

Hello all you gorgeous Hattingdonians! It’s fiesta time. And here’s why. It’s the Fifth of May — Cinco de Mayo. Of course, you all know what this is. As you can see, Hattingdon has donned her Fiesta hat. ¡Vámonos de fiesta!

Fiesta fashion hat with golden yellow dome and wide upturned brim in colours of red, yellow and blue. Update.
Fiesta.

About Cinco de Mayo

Did you know . . . ?

• Cinco de Mayo, (Spanish: “Fifth of May”), also called Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla, holiday celebrated in parts of Mexico and the United States.

• When in 1861 Mexico declared a temporary moratorium on the repayment of foreign debts, English, Spanish, and French troops invaded the country. By April 1862 the English and Spanish had withdrawn, but the French, with the support of wealthy landowners, remained in an attempt to establish a monarchy under Maximilian of Austria and to curb U.S. power in North America.

• The date commemorates an outnumbered — 2,000 to 6,000 — Mexican army’s 1862 victory over the French forces of Napoleon III. at the Battle of Puebla during the Franco-Mexican War.

• A Texan led those outnumbered troops in Puebla. Ignacio Zaragoza SeguÍn, a 33-year-old officer from the Goliad area, was Mexico’s minister of war and navy and was assigned to lead the Army of the East and the defense of Puebla.

• The U.S. has celebrated Cinco de Mayo since the end of the Franco-Mexico and U.S. civil wars.

• In the beginning, Latinos in California and the other parts of the U.S. celebrated Cinco de Mayo with parades in which people dressed in Civil War uniforms and gave speeches on the Battle of Puebla.

• The date is embraced more generally in the same way as other ethnic celebrations such as St. Patrick’s Day, Mardi Gras and Octoberfest.

• Cinco de Mayo isn’t Mexico’s Independence Day. Mexico’s equivalent of the Fourth of July is 16 de Septiembre (September 16). In many parts of Mexico, Cinco de Mayo is a work day.


See you again soon. Love ya!


Hattingdon H Logo in her signature brown.

©Vivian J. Grant.