It is always a surprise to me that there are plenty of fellows wandering around Adelaide wearing their baseball cap backwards because some rapper did so back in the nineteen nineties, and now somehow it is considered cool, but barely any fellas wander about wearing a decent brimmed hat to stave off the disastrous South Australian sunlight.
After all Australia has one of the highest incidents of skin cancer or melanoma in the world, in fact South Australia is the skin cancer capital being the driest and hottest state with the least shade provided by the various councils.
Particularly vulnerable are the pale skinned derivatives of English migrants whose skin is much too fair to deal with the relentless burning. They are a nasty scar waiting to happen a lot of the time, and yet they wear the silly little American baseball cap to be cool.
This business, Adelaide Hatters is a classy little establishment that has supplied hats to the smart folk for quite a few years by now. Tucked away in Adelaide Arcade they have an air of quality about them which I suppose is because hats tend to be thought of as 'old school' these days; women's hats are a little strange at the moment, "Fascinaters" I think they call the most popular types at the moment which are more like the star on top of a Christmas Tree than an actual hat to shade your face.
The selection of men's hats is great with prices as low as fifty dollars to start and obviously you can get quite high in price; but lets face it, you want to save your ears, nose, eyes and face from burning, a hat costs less than surgery or cancer doesn't it?
The need to slap on sunscreen is reduced if you are wearing a hat, and sunscreen is not a cheap item either, so it is both a health issue and a money saving exercise to purchase a decently brimmed hat that can be worn wherever, rather than to be caught at some stage of life with a nasty side effect of gloriously bright sunshine.
It can take a little time to decide on a decent hat, and they don't get too concerned here if you try a few then go away to think about it. I have a great Akubra, but there are a solid variety of men's hats to go through, some more effective than others. read more