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- Trilby (novel) - Wikipedia
Trilby is a sensation novel by George du Maurier and one of the most popular novels of its time Published serially in Harper's New Monthly Magazine from January to August 1894, it was published in book form on 8 September 1894 and sold 200,000 copies in the United States alone [1]
- Trilby vs Fedora: Whats the Difference? - American Hat Makers
Trilby hats (aka stingy brims) were worn by reporters with a press card tucked under the brim in 40s and 50s Frank Sinatra also wore a trilby, and this hat is popular among jazz musicians
- Trilby | Victorian England, Gothic Horror, Gothic Romance | Britannica
Trilby, novel by George du Maurier, published in 1894 The novel tells the story of Trilby O’Ferrall, an artist’s model in Paris, who falls under the spell of the compelling Svengali, a musician who trains her voice through hypnosis and turns her into a singing star
- Trilby vs. Fedora: Whats the Difference? – Hats in the Belfry
While the trilby often looks like it has a snapped brim, it’s actually fixed in place and doesn’t offer the same styling flexibility as a fedora That’s an important distinction: trilbys shouldn’t be manipulated or snapped, as doing so can warp the shape permanently
- TRILBY Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
from the fact that such a hat was worn in the London stage version of the novel Trilby (1894) by George du Maurier
- What is a Trilby Hat? Types, Definition Photos - ThreadCurve
A trilby is a hat with a narrow brim; this was also known as the rich man’s hat or the ‘brown trilby ’ It was at its prime in terms of popularity in the 1960s but has gone in and out of popularity since
- George du Maurier’s Trilby: A Victorian Phenomenon
He certainly succeeded: Trilby would become the sensation of the age, not just in Britain but in the United States In time, even when the novel was largely forgotten, its title would be immortalised in the name of a hat
- Trilby (Oxford Worlds Classics) - Amazon. com
Trilby (1894), his second novel, became an immense international success, generating a craze - `Trilby-mania' - that went beyond the novel itself Manufacturers vied to produce Trilby products - from ice-cream to shoes - and a town in Florida named its streets after characters in the book
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