Akubra Banjo Paterson Hat Heritage Fawn

$ 304.00 AUD $380.00
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Colour Heritage Fawn

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Description

Named after the famous Aussie Poet, Andrew Barton Paterson who is better known as " Banjo " Paterson who captured the imagination of the country with such famous poems such as Waltzing Matilda among many others. A Solicitor, a farmer, a  journalist and a writer known and loved for many a decade as he penned the famous verse "There was movement at the station" He would have been proud of this hat made in his name by Akubra, Australia's oldest hat maker.

The Heritage Collection is Akubra's line of premium quality hats. The felt is produced from a selected blend of specially graded rabbit fur which allows a longer shrinking process. This process develops 25% more shrinkage, resulting in a denser and stronger felt. The band is made from the leather of one our Aussies greatest fish, the Barramundi, it's the natural leather from this fish that makes it very unique! Each and every band is different. Some dark, some light, some a bit thicker than the other so each and every one is custom-made and unique in every way! This is one of the top selling hats Akubra make. 

  • Australian Made
  • Barramundi Hat Band
  • Internal Satin Lining
  • Internal: exceptional quality sheepskin roan leather sweatband, cut wider than normal to ensure the greatest comfort
  • Material: Select blend of specially graded rabbit and hare fur
  • Fully LIned. 

Features

  • Imperial Quality
  • Barramundi Hat Band
  • Made from Akubra's Imperial Quality Pure Fur Felt
  • Reeded Roan Leather Sweatband.
  • Made in Australia
  • Water-Resistant
  • Brim: 70mm Cut Edge 
  • Crown Height: 90mm

About the brand

Akubra is an Australian hat manufacturer. The company is associated with bush hats made of rabbit fur felt with wide brims that are worn in rural Australia.

In 1874 Benjamin Dunkerley arrived in Tasmania from England and decided to start a hat making business in Hobart. His skills as a hatter were backed by his ability to invent machinery, and soon after his arrival he had developed a mechanical method of removing the hair tip from rabbit fur so the under-fur could be used in felt hat making. Previously this task had to be done by hand.

By 2015 Akubra has produced two million hats for the military.

Akubra Hats are still proudly Australian made in Kempsey.