Textiles & Costume
comment 1

Un chapeau orné d’ananas (yes, it’s a pineapple hat!)

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

What do you do when you make a dress covered in pineapples?

1790s Tiny Piney dress thedreamstress.com

Obviously you make a pineapple hat to go with it!

I’ve been enamoured of this delightfully ridiculous 1797 fashion plate for some time.  It’s a turban ornamented with pearls and a pineapple!

Journal des Luxus und der Moden, September 1797

Journal des Luxus und der Moden, September 1797

While the turban was fun, my original worry was about having a hat to protect myself from the sun for the picnic at Drottningholm and other events in Europe (jokes on me, it rained for every single one of them).

Instead of a turban, I decided I needed un chapeau orné d’ananas et de nœuds.  A hat with pineapples and ribbons!

My primary inspiration for the shape of the hat was this:

December 1799 Journal des Luxus und der Moden

December 1799 Journal des Luxus und der Moden

I also really liked the centre front bow placement of this example, and how it’s a bit spiky and pineapple-y:

Fashion plate, late 1790s

I started with this straw hat, which I wore throughout Europe and got exactly one photograph of myself in, because I kept forgetting to take photos of me:

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

My idea was that I make the ribbons so they could be quickly taken on and off the hat, so I could wear it as an ordinary sunhat or a historically inspired hat.

That isn’t what happened because I never ended up needing to wear it as a historical hat in Europe!  When I was back in NZ I redid the ribbons and pineapples and permanently and securely attached them to the hat.

And the result was this:

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

I used air dry paper clay for the pineapples.

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

It’s a material I’ve worked with a lot, so it wasn’t hard to figure out how to make pineapples.  Make ovals, press lines, roll out more paper clay into thin sheets and cut leaves, build them on from the inside out.

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

Once dry I began painting the pineapples, building up colours until they were satisfyingly pineapple-y

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

Confession.  I used my 20 year old Caran d’Ache Neocolour watercolour crayons to paint them.  Possibly not the most durable medium if the pineapples ever get wet, but then, neither is the air dry clay itself…

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

Once they were dry I used a large needle to poke a hole in the bottom, and then inserted twists of lightweight millinery wire and glued them firmly in place.  I was then able to sew the pineapples to the hat:

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

And that is how I made un chapeau orné d’ananas et de nœuds!

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

Bonnet a la Ananas thedreamstress.com

Now I just need an event to wear it to where it doesn’t rain!

 

 

1 Comment

  1. Johanna says

    Wonderful, now you only need a pineapple reticule to go with it as well.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.