Flat Caps
A well-made flat cap is one of the most enduring pieces of headwear ever designed. Browse the HatsXCaps collection for tweed, wool, linen, and leather flat caps for men and women, from Irish country classics to contemporary everyday styles.
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Dogtooth Tweed Newsboy Cap | Unisex British Flat Cap
This dogtooth tweed newsboy cap is a solid everyday hat that draws on classic British heritage without overthinking it. The 30% wool, 70% polyester blend gives it warmth and breathability for cooler weather, and the strong construction holds up to regular daily use without...- £21.99
- £21.99
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Brown
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Dogtooth Tweed Flat Cap | Lightweight Unisex Cotton Cap
This dogtooth check flat cap is built for people who wear their hats every day and need something that keeps up. The lightweight cotton blend makes it comfortable in warmer conditions, and the soft inner lining with integrated sweatband keeps it fresh during longer...- £23.99
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Beige
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Classic United Kingdom Flag Flat Cap for Country Events
The Classic United Kingdom Flag Flat Cap for Country Events solves this problem by combining timeless British style with everyday comfort and practicality. Designed for men who appreciate tradition, this flat cap completes your outfit effortlessly while standing up to long days outdoors. Hat...- £21.99
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Navy
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About Flat Caps
The flat cap has been part of working and everyday life in Britain and Ireland for centuries. Early versions appear in English records as far back as the sixteenth century, when an Act of Parliament required working men to wear woolen caps on Sundays to support the domestic wool trade. The style evolved steadily through the Victorian and Edwardian eras, becoming the standard hat of the working man across England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland. Its association with particular regions runs deep: the Yorkshire flat cap, the Irish tweed cap, and the Scottish cloth cap each carry their own distinct character rooted in local textile traditions. More recently the flat cap found a new global audience through Peaky Blinders, the television series set in 1920s Birmingham, which brought the style to millions of viewers who had never previously considered wearing one.
Materials are where flat caps earn their character. Tweed is the most storied choice, with Harris Tweed, a hand-woven fabric produced exclusively in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland, representing the finest end of the range. A Harris tweed flat cap carries genuine provenance and a texture that softens and improves with years of wear. Wool flat caps in herringbone, houndstooth, and plain weaves offer similar warmth and structure at a broader price range. Irish tweed and Donegal tweed versions bring a rougher, earthier texture with their own distinct regional identity. Linen flat caps are lighter and more breathable, making them the natural warm-weather choice, while cotton versions offer easy everyday wearability and wash well. Leather flat caps push the silhouette in a more contemporary, urban direction and require no breaking in.
At HatsXCaps you will find flat caps for men and women across this full range of materials and styles. The standard flat cap construction uses between six and eight panels stitched together to form the crown, with a short, stiffened brim projecting forward. The fit sits close to the head without pressing tightly, and most quality flat caps include an adjustable inner band or snap closure to fine-tune the fit. Whether you are looking for a traditional tweed flat cap to wear on country walks or a slim linen style for city wear, a flat cap rewards the wearer with a timeless versatility that very few hats can match.
Browse our Newsboy Caps for a fuller, rounder crown variation on the same classic British theme, or explore our Fiddler Caps for a shorter-brimmed, more streamlined take on structured headwear.
Flat Cap FAQ
Are flat caps a British thing?
Flat caps are strongly associated with Britain and Ireland, where they have been worn for centuries and remain deeply embedded in regional culture from Yorkshire to County Donegal. However, the style spread widely across Europe and North America during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and is now worn globally. In the United States the flat cap is also known as the ivy cap or scally cap, particularly in Boston and New England. The British and Irish connection remains the strongest cultural association, but the flat cap belongs to no single country.
What are the different types of flat cap?
The classic flat cap has several well-established variations. The standard flat cap, also called a driving cap or cloth cap, has a low, round, paneled crown and a short, stiffened forward brim. The ivy cap is a very similar style popular in the United States, typically with a slightly rounder crown and a button on top. The scally cap, associated with Boston and Irish-American culture, is a close relative with a shorter brim. The newsboy cap, sometimes confused with the flat cap, has a fuller, rounder, more voluminous crown with a distinct bloused shape above the brim. Within the flat cap family, styles vary by material, panel count, brim length, and crown height.
How do you wear a flat cap?
The most straightforward way to wear a flat cap is pulled forward and level on the head, with the brim sitting roughly an inch above the eyebrows. This is the classic working-man's position and suits most face shapes well. For a more relaxed look, tilt the cap slightly to one side. Some people wear them with the brim to the back, which gives a more casual, contemporary feel and is perfectly acceptable. Flat caps look well with everything from a suit and overcoat to jeans and a heavy sweater, and the texture of the cap should generally complement the weight of the rest of the outfit.
What is the difference between a flat cap and a newsboy cap?
The main difference is in the crown. A flat cap has a low, close-fitting, paneled crown that sits flat against the head, with a short forward brim. A newsboy cap has a fuller, more rounded, billowing crown that gathers at the brim button and creates a distinct bloused silhouette. Both share a similar forward brim and are made from comparable materials, but the newsboy cap has a considerably more voluminous profile and a softer, more structured appearance than the flat cap.



