List cover-chiefs alphabetically

This page alphabetically proposes a list of Cover-chiefs .

Last modifications of the articles of the list

With

  • Wings of butterfly: cap with Cholet (France)
  • Akubra : Australian hat.
  • Armet : helmet used between 15th and middle of the 17th century.
  • Armille : large coarse straw hat, very flat, carried by the women of the surroundings of Thiers (France) to protect itself from the sun.
  • Attifet : cap widows at the 16th century, at a peak in the middle of the face and two arcs of circle on the sides.
  • Atour of gibet
  • Atours of head: generic name to indicate the high caps, in horn or with pads of the women of the the Middle Ages (see also Hennin).

B

  • Bachi : sailor's hat (blue when it is related to the national territory, white except metropolis.
  • Bachlyk : left scarf in wool net, forming a cap for the head, with hanging ends provided with long bunches.
  • Bada : béruréen cover-chief.
  • Bagnolette : left cap of woman.
  • Bather: left bonnet of woman to small folds.
  • Balloon: large cap saintongeaise
  • stringcourse: bandage of fabric which girds the head or the face.
  • Barbichet : cap limousine
  • Bardou-paisan: cap area of Castle-nine-of-Faou.
  • Baretina : red wool hat of the Catalans (France)
  • Bar: ecclesiastical square hat; leather helmet boiled of the coal minors (northern of France)
  • beating the eye : cap 13th century whose sides advance along the cheeks.
  • Bavolet
  • Bàzzelekàpp : cap with married (Uhrwiller, Alsace)
  • Béguin: Cap what carried the béguines. Cap which sticks under the chin by a support and in particular the bonnet that one put to the babies.
  • Beret: cover-chief out of knitted and felted, circular and flat wool; hairstyle of origin inhabitant of Béarn.
    • Beret: attribute of the French to the beret in the Stereotype S. Terme reported by the tourists of the Basque Coast at the end of the 19th century, the beret was usually carried to Basque Country, but it of it was not originating and was not manufactured there.
    • Beret of Alpine hunter or Tart: broad wool beret.
    • Beret regency
  • Bibi: The bibi is about 1830 a type of hood tied under the chin at the edge in the prolongation of the line of the cap. Then, it indicates all the small hats worn on a chignon. Then it indicates in the years 1970 a small female hat without edge. And by extension, any hat of lady.
  • Bicornuate: hat on board folded up on the cap in two horns.
  • Bob : small fabric hat.
  • bolero: small Spanish hat of woman, edge basin, trimmed with pompoms.
  • Bolivar: hat of the top hat type to cap strongly widened in vogue about 1820 in France.
  • bends: traditional helmet of protection of the riders.
  • Boned : small cap of fabric, carried under the large Breton cap.
  • Boned plad : Breton beret of alpine type.
  • bonnet: knitted cap. Certain models resemble hats, with an outline of visor and side protections.
    • Bonnet with the rosette: carried to Germany and France with 15th and 16th centuries.
    • German Bonnet
    • Dunce's cap: cap paper, provided with two ears imitating those of an ass, and which one capped the lazy schoolboys to punish them by shame.
    • Bonnet in Fontanges
    • Bearskin: bonnet of bear carried inter alia by pomegranates of the national guard.
    • Bathing cap
    • Bonnet of convict
    • Bonnet of insane
    • Bonnet of sailor: to see Bachi.
    • Night-cap: sails very about it at the 18th century when the men often had cranium shaved to carry wigs, it was out of cotton, silk or velvet. It went in interior and not to sleep.
    • Bonnet dervish: cover-chief of which the cap with a form of sugar loaf aiming at protecting itself from heat, carried in the brotherhoods soufies like the Dancing dervishes .
    • Bonnet says beating the eye
    • Bonnet says dormeuse cornet
    • Bonnet
    • ecclesiastical Bonnet
    • French Bonnet
    • Italian Bonnet
    • Phrygian cap: cover-chief of Cybèle the Republican one.
    • flat Bonnet with ribbons and barbs
    • Forage cap: stone-block; cloth bonnet of the small behavior.
    • Forage cap to visor: to see Kepi.
  • cap
  • borsalino : supple felt hat called Fedora in England, Borsalino is the name of a manufacturer of Italian hat, this name passed in the common language.
  • Pad: hat of child for the protection of the head.
  • Boussingot : small sailor hat in straw or patent leather in black (slang).

C

  • convertible: very in vogue end 18th-beginning 19th century, it is a broad enveloping cap made on cane arches to maintain it high. It is out of silk.
  • hood
  • Barouche: old hat of woman who folded up herself on itself as the hood of a barouche.
  • Stone-block
  • Cap: left bonnet of low form which covers the top of the head; cap carried by the ecclesiastics, the red cap is the distinctive sign of the cardinals;
In Belgium, the Calotte is also one of the traditional caps of the university students or universities (see also Penne).
  • Camauro : a bonnet of velvet or satin bordered of hermine, in the beginning a cap of monk.
  • Rower: hat with not very deep square cap, flat edge with triple thickness of straw for the men. In all matters and widths of edges for the women.
  • Capeline : additional , decorative and female hat by definition, hat on broad board (passes in technical term).
  • Hood: hat of woman with supports.
  • Hood: cap in form of cap, often integral part of a clothing.
  • cap: cover-chief out of fabric which can be folded back behind.
  • capulet : cap of woman of use in the the Pyrenees left.
  • Caroche or Carocha: bonnet of paperboard in the sugar loaf shape which the torture victims carried on roughing-hew it.
  • Helmet: left protective hat out of metal, plastic, glass fiber or carbon, leather, cork, etc
    • Tropical helmet: civil hat and soldier carried in the tropical countries, the base is out of cork covered with fabric, a system of cap allows the air circulation between the head and the base.
    • Helmet of building site
    • Helmet of cycling
    • Helmet of space
    • Helmet of motorcyclist
    • Helmet of parachuting
    • automobile Helmet of piloting
    • Helmet of piloting of fighter plan
    • Spiked helmet
    • military helmets: Helmet Adrian, Helmet Brodie, Stahlhelm, etc
  • Cap: attribute of the sportsman, always with visor, and sometimes open. Light and practical.
    • Cap of the father Bugeaud: visible with the museum of the armies, the visor is prolonged symmetrically on the back of stone-block. It is at the origin of a famous walk of the zouaves: you saw the cap, the cap; did you see the cap, the cap with the Bugeaud father?
  • Hat:
    • Hat with opera hat: hairstyle with very broad master key raised to form two horns; to see Bicornuate (not to confuse with the opera hat).
    • Hat lampion or Lampion: tricorn on small board.
    • Hat with the androsman
    • Hat in Pennsylvania
    • Hat in Switzerland
    • Hat with Wallachian the
    • Hat with narrow master key by front
    • Hat with peak: hat with retroussis in the shape of horn (from black color, country of the salt-water marshes, 44).
    • Hat cap
    • Opera hat: top hat which is flattened and is raised using springs. Developed by Gibus, inventor with whom one owes also the ring binders. (not to confuse with the hat with opera hat or bicornuate)
    • Hat-cornet
    • Hat of shepherdess: time Louis XIV.
    • Safari hat
    • Hat of cow-boy: to see Stetson.
    • Hat of fairy or Hennin: high witch's hat.
    • Straw hat
    • Hat of witch: high sometimes ruffled or twisted witch's hat black.
    • Hat called to Marlborough
    • Bowler hat: these models of hats have generally only the form connected with their vegetable homonym, the color drawing rather on the dark side. They bear also the name of derby , can be because it was conceived to make sport by the hatter of Lord Bowler, who was extremely obstructed by his top hat.
    • flat Hat
    • Hat tahitien
    • Tyrolean hat
  • Chapel: old form of the word hat.
    • Chapel de Montauban
    • Chapel of iron
  • Hood: indicate several kinds of hairstyles with pad.
  • Chapka : bonnet of fur, with auricles rabatables for winter conditions. Comes from Russian Chapka who means bonnet , hat . Diminutive: chapotchka ; the Little Red Riding Hood is called КраснаяШапочка (krasnaïa chapotchka, red Petite chapka ).
  • Charlotte: left popular bonnet in the modest classes 18th at the 19th century, considered as the precursor of the Capote. Nowadays, it is also the name of the disposable bonnet with rubber band used to hold the hair into agro-alimentary or surgery.
  • Chèche : left turban.
  • Chechia: supple bonnet made out of knitted wool then felted, generally of red color, it is mainly manufactured in Tunisia. It can be decorated of a silk nipple.
  • Cimier
  • clementine: black silk bonnet.
  • bell
  • cap:
    • Cap arlésienne: gansée, very worked velvet ribbon posed on the top of the typical hairstyle of the arlésiennes.
    • Cap auvergnate
    • Cap boulonnaise
    • Cap bourguigonne
    • Breton Cap
      • Bardou-paisan: cap area of Castle-nine-of-Faou.
      • Bigoudène
      • PEN sardin: cap women, area of Douarnenez, Concarneau and Crozon.
    • Charente-native Cap
    • Cap gascone
    • Cap limousine
      • Barbichet: cap area of Limoges.
    • Cap of Montaigu
    • Savoyard Cap or border .
    • Vendean Cap
      • Quichenotte: cap Vendean country.
    • Cap of Indian
    • Cap of nurse
  • Colback: military hairstyle. Of Russian колпак (kolpak), bonnet , but also bell and lamp-shade .
  • Coltin : leather hat on broad board carried by the forts of the markets to ensure the stability of the loads coltinées on the head.
  • Cone
  • cornet: cap in vogue at the time of the marvellous ones; it is also a cap carried by certain nuns.
  • Couffié : Arab hairstyle.
  • crown
  • Czapaka: male name. Orthography used by the military newspaper of 1858, one writes also shapska , schapska . Cap military first empire, borrowed from the Poles, carried by the lancers.

D

  • Deerstalker : literally a hat for traquor of stags presenting a certain mimetic tendency with the autumnal forest and a suitable comfort for this kind of situations. Sherlock Holmes, returned it celebrates, therefore one will more commonly indicate this model of the name of the famous detective.

E

  • Escoffion : left cushion, cover of a lattice enriched by passementerie, pearls, glass or gold dusts, that the women related to their cap to the Moyen-âge.

F

  • Faluche : traditional cap of the students.
  • Fedora : English name of the soft felt hat called borsalino commonly.
  • felt: all hats in felt of man or lady.
  • fez : truncated and rigid cap.
  • Rotten: a large handkerchief at the lace edges, which go posed on the head so that the corners fall freely, hairstyle sails about it between 1600 and 1650.
  • Fontange: female hairstyle consisting of the shape in wire rather high made up of several degrees furnished with muslin, ribbons, flowers and feathers. This bonnet and its denomination owe their origin with the duchess of Fontanges which, its hairstyle having been demolished in a shooting party (about the year 1680) went up it with ribbons whose nodes fell down to him on the face. This fashion was maintained until about 1720.
  • Foulard
  • Frileuse

G

  • Galeron : felt hat worn by the falconers with the the Middle Ages;
  • Galérus : hat in skin of animal carried by the Flamines (Roman priests) which will become galure or galurin in the popular speech.
  • Gibus : to see Hat-opera hat: top hat which one can fold up again by a mechanism with springs.
  • Gorgeron
  • Greek: cap low valley of the Rhone.

H

  • Top hat: very appreciated in the past, it still gives a very formal aspect to certain ceremonies, while insisting visually, with an argumentation of size on the most visible part of the human body.
  • Heaume : medieval helmet.
    • Heaume with head of clamping plate
  • Hennin: conical female hairstyle in the sugar loaf shape which made its appearance in France towards 1420 and was spread then in Italy and Germany and with the Netherlands. It consisted of a light fabric recovering the shape out of paperboard or wire, decorated of a long veil, which, on the basis of the top of the cone, generally fell down on before left arm. The hennin was not long in reaching so extravagant proportions which it became the object of special restrictive ordinances. It is only in second half of the 15th century that this fashion disappeared.
  • Huve : ornament of head for the ladies, towards second half of the 14th century, made up of an elegant cornet that the women of average condition carried downtown. The huve preceded the horns, escoffions them, the hennins and persisted even after these strange hairstyles.

I

  • Infule :
    • ancient Infule
    • Infule of bishop

J

K

  • Kabell : bonnet of Breton child.
  • Kakochnik : old cap of marriage of the Russian women, whose name remained to indicate the bulbs of the churches. In kokochnik , plural kokochniki would be transcribed rather.
  • Keffieh (or Keffié, of Arabic: كوفية, kūfīyä) is the traditional cap of the peasants and the Palestinian Bedouins.
  • Kepi: military hat composed of a stone-block and a visor. Old name: Forage cap to visor.
  • Kerfeunten : old cap of the every day of the country Borledenn (Brittany).
  • Kippa : left cap punt carried by the men of judaïque religion as a sign of respect.

L

  • Lampion or Hat lampion: tricorn on small board.
  • Laong kinibang : large conical hat in bamboo and fabric covered with a fabric patchwork and decorated of a veil bright red.

M

  • Mantille
  • Marquis: tricorn decorated with a boa feathers
  • Mézail with nozzle of sparrow
  • Mianliu: imperial cap invented by the emperor Qin Shi Huang.
  • Miter: ecclesiastical object of head, its relationship with the hat côtoie that of the crown.
    • orthodoxe Miter of patriarch
    • Miter of Persian bishop
    • Miter
    • Phrygian Miter
  • morion: Spanish helmet.
  • mortar: cap magistrates.

NR

  • Némès : cap emblématique with the Pharaons.

P

  • Panama: mainly made starting from fibers cut out in the sheets of lataniers, some of these hats are true wonders of manual ingeniousness, and their source is Ecuadorian. The name of Panama, comes from the digging of the channel, when the Western executives ended up understanding that the Indians who dug under their feet, supported much best the heats of the sun thanks to their braided hats. The finest variety is the superfino montécristi , it is necessary more than three months for the craftsman braider to make a hat.
  • Pakoul or Pakol: Afghan hat out of wool, the wafer shape, made famous for the commander Massoud.
  • Papakha : Caucasian bonnet in sheepskin.
  • Master key mountain: to see hood.
  • Peci : indonésien or Malayan
  • PEN sardin: cap women, area of Douarnenez, Concarneau and Crozon. PEN sardin means head of sardine .
  • Warp end: one of the traditional caps of the Belgian students (see also Cap).
  • wig
  • Pétase: the pétase (in Greek old πέτασος / pétasos ) is a round hat on broad and flat board. The Greek thought it of origin Thessalie nne.
  • Pnom
  • Pot at the head

Q

  • Quichenotte : cap Vendean country.

R

  • Lattice
  • Reticle

S

  • salad

    • Salad with tail
    • Salad at cut sight
  • Schako or Shako or Eunuch flute: cap military, in the shape of cone truncated with a visor, it in hairs and was often decorated with a feather or a pompom.
  • Secret
  • Greenhouse head of Pierrot
  • Sharpie: cap with Connecticut.
  • Shifazzo : cap with Sicily.
  • Shokker : cap with Holland.
  • Shrimper
  • Shtraimel : Traditional cap of the Jewish Religion, carried by the Hassidims Rabbis.
  • Sombrero: Mexican straw hat on broad board.
  • mouse
  • Stella: traditional cap of the Swiss students.
  • Stetson : also known like hat of cow-boy.
  • South-wester: hat in oil-cloth carried by the sailors sinner.

T

  • Taconnet
  • Tahitien
  • Talpack : military hairstyle.
  • Plug
  • Tapabor
  • Tarbouch or Tarbouche: cap Turkish or Greek.
  • Tiara
  • Tiara papal
  • Hat: a cylindrical hat without edges whose most known model is the chef's hat. One also produces many hats of fur, skin or all other hot matters, for the icy winters.
  • Tortil
  • Tricorn: hat of the 18th century on board folded up on the cap in three horns.
  • Tuque : wool hat worn in winter
  • Turban
  • Tutulus
  • Tyrolean

U

  • Ushanka : Russian traditional hat.
  • Uskuf

V

  • veil

See too

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