Montana Peak
Commonly worn between the 1860-1890.
- Crease: Montana Peak
- Brim Width: 4"
- Crown Height: 5-1/4"
- Hatband: black cloth
- Sweatband: foam-padded cotton twill with non-woven backing
- Guatemalan Standard Palm
- Retains shape when wet
- Can be reshaped using just water
- UPF 50 - Blocks 98% of UV Light
- Handcrafted in Guatemala - Handcreased in Texas
Customer Reviews
My New Hat
I just received my new hat. Fits perfect. got the large vents (do it) and the eyelets for the draw string. (Do that too). Gives a bit of "Outlaw Look". Fit me to a "T" . Thank You.
By Bruce A Mills from Meadows Place, TX USA on Feb 15, 2019
322 of 651 found the following review helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No
The Montana Peak Hat Earns Mountain-High Praise!
I've always liked Sunbody palm hats, and bought two low crown Montana Peak hats, well over two years ago. (The hat-maker was Vicente Pacheco; yes, proud craftsmen still sign their work!) Right off, I put horse-hair stampede strings on both; and decorated the fronts with crossed-arrows Green Beret pins. Serious boonie-bashers want to hang on to headgear through thick & thin, & old veterans often decorate hats with pins from their old uniforms. I'm in my 60s. Earlier, I worked many summers on my uncle's mountain pack-train, delivering supplies mainly to remote miners & foresters. After enlisting, I was picked for confidential stuff requiring long stays in the boondocks. I chose the Montana Peak partly because my uncle wore a version from western Canada he'd bought in 1939. He was very proud of his "Canadian Stetson!" I'd also wanted a unique historic hat with a long tradition. But, I didn't want a hat so common that friends might have trouble identifying me at a distance. The Montana Peak was in vogue, in America, mainly between 1860 and 1890; although a low-crowned, flat-brimmed version was still seen on the Canadian Plains until much later. As I said, my uncle bought a deluxe fur felt Canadian version of the Montana Peak, in 1939. I enjoy the feel of this Sum Body hat-- not too heavy, with pnenty of brim for shade and style. Fit "To-size" is also right on; I've tried on many different Size 7-7/8 & Size-63 hats of this brand, and they have all been spot-on. (I can't speak for other hat-sizes, obviously.) The hats are also pleasantly light--which is great, when spending long hours riding or hiking. Putting on "stampede strings" is very easy. If you don't order from Sun Body Hats, and get the eyelet option that lets you attach a hat-lanyard or stampede string, it's easy & simple to install cotter-pins in the hat-brim. I really appreciated this when I'd played the devil, adding cotter-pins for a lanyard-string to the heavy brim of a felt fedora! The hats are a pleasure to wear, plus a pleasure to work with, if you have to. While not waterproof, they can stand up to a few minor sprinkles; and with care, can last for years!
By a member from South-Central Ohio, USA on Aug 19, 2015
461 of 874 found the following review helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No
The Montana Peak Hat Earns Mountain-High Praise!
I've always liked Sunbody palm hats, and bought two low crown Montana Peak hats, well over two years ago. (The hat-maker was Vicente Pacheco; yes, proud craftsmen still sign their work!) Right off, I put horse-hair stampede strings on both; and decorated the fronts with crossed-arrows Green Beret pins. Serious boonie-bashers want to hang on to headgear through thick & thin, & old veterans often decorate hats with pins from their old uniforms. I'm in my 60s. Earlier, I worked many summers on my uncle's mountain pack-train, delivering supplies mainly to remote miners & foresters. After enlisting, I was picked for confidential stuff requiring long stays in the boondocks. I chose the Montana Peak partly because my uncle wore a version from western Canada he'd bought in 1939. He was very proud of his "Canadian Stetson!" I'd also wanted a unique historic hat with a long tradition. But, I didn't want a hat so common that friends might have trouble identifying me at a distance. The Montana Peak was in vogue, in America, mainly between 1860 and 1890; although a low-crowned, flat-brimmed version was still seen on the Canadian Plains until much later. As I said, my uncle bought a deluxe fur felt Canadian version of the Montana Peak, in 1939. I enjoy the feel of this Sum Body hat-- not too heavy, with pnenty of brim for shade and style. Fit "To-size" is also right on; I've tried on many different Size 7-7/8 & Size-63 hats of this brand, and they have all been spot-on. (I can't speak for other hat-sizes, obviously.) The hats are also pleasantly light--which is great, when spending long hours riding or hiking. Putting on "stampede strings" is very easy. If you don't order from Sun Body Hats, and get the eyelet option that lets you attach a hat-lanyard or stampede string, it's easy & simple to install cotter-pins in the hat-brim. I really appreciated this when I'd played the devil, adding cotter-pins for a lanyard-string to the heavy brim of a felt fedora! The hats are a pleasure to wear, plus a pleasure to work with, if you have to. While not waterproof, they can stand up to a few minor sprinkles; and with care, can last for years!
By a member from South-Central Ohio, USA on Aug 19, 2015
372 of 766 found the following review helpful. Was this review helpful to you? Yes No