Chapeau (disambiguation)

Last updated

A chapeau is a flat-topped hat once worn by senior clerics.

Chapeau may also refer to:


Related Research Articles

Opera hat Collapsible top hat

An opera hat also called a chapeau claque or gibus is a top hat variant that is collapsible through a spring system, originally intended for less spacious venues, such as the theatre and opera house.

Bicorne Cocked hat with two sides of the brim turned up against the crown

The bicorne or bicorn (two-cornered) is a historical form of hat widely adopted in the 1790s as an item of uniform by European and American army and naval officers. Most generals and staff officers of the Napoleonic period wore bicornes, which survived as widely-worn full-dress headdress until the 20th century.

A chapeau is a flat-topped hat once worn by senior clerics.

Wallace Reginald McDonald was a Liberal party member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in Portage-du-Fort, Quebec and became a merchant by career.

Brides-les-Bains Commune in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France

Brides-les-Bains is a commune in the Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France.

<i>Woman with a Hat</i>

Woman with a Hat is a painting by Henri Matisse. An oil on canvas, it depicts Matisse's wife, Amelie. It was painted in 1905 and exhibited at the Salon d'Automne during the fall of the same year, along with works by André Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck and several other artists known as "Fauves".

Chapeau, Quebec

Chapeau is a village in the Canadian province of Quebec, located along the Culbute Channel of the Ottawa River in the municipality of L'Isle-aux-Allumettes in Pontiac Regional County Municipality.

Channel 23 or TV23 may refer to several television stations:

LIsle-aux-Allumettes Municipality in Quebec, Canada

L'Isle-aux-Allumettes is a municipality in the Outaouais region, part of the Pontiac Regional County Municipality, Quebec, Canada. The municipality consists primarily of Allumette Island, and also includes Morrison Island, Marcotte Island, and some minor islets, all in the Ottawa River north of Pembroke.

The Italian Straw Hat may refer to:

Irénée-Marie Ecological Reserve is an ecological reserve in the unorganized territory of Rivière-de-la-Savane, in Mékinac Regional County Municipality, in Quebec, Canada. It was established on October 31, 1985. The Ecological Reserve protects a forest of Eastern white pine, red pine and pine gray.

Italian straw hat may refer to:

<i>Ba tầm</i> Traditional Vietnamese headwear

The Ba tầm hat or nón Ba tầm is a traditional Vietnamese flat palm hat. It should be distinguished from other traditional Vietnamese headwear such as the conical nón lá and the coiled khăn vấn.

Chapeau d'Espagne was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare who won the classic 1000 Guineas at Newmarket Racecourse in 1837. Chapeau d'Espagne was one of the best two-year-old fillies of 1836, when she won the Criterion Stakes and was placed in both the Molecomb Stakes and the Clearwell Stakes. In the following year she won the 1000 Guineas and finished second in the Oaks Stakes. After failing to win again in 1837 she returned as a four-year-old to win four more races. In all she ran twenty-two times between July 1836 and October 1838, winning eight races. After her retirement from racing she had some success as a broodmare.

<i>Femme au Chapeau</i> Painting by Jean Metzinger

Femme au Chapeau or Lucie au chapeau is an oil painting created circa 1906 by the French artist and theorist Jean Metzinger (1883–1956). The work is executed in a highly personal Divisionist style with a marked Proto-Cubist component during the height of Fauvism. Femme au Chapeau exhibits a presentiment of Metzinger's subsequent interest in the faceting of form associated with Cubism. The painting now forms part of the collection of the Korban Art Foundation.

Zec du Chapeau-de-Paille

The ZEC Chapeau de Paille is a "zone d'exploitation contrôlée" (zec), located in the Mekinac Regional County Municipality, in administrative region of Mauricie, in Quebec (Canada).

<i>Portrait of Susanna Lunden</i> Painting by Peter Paul Rubens

Portrait of Susanna Lunden or Le Chapeau de Paille is a painting by Peter Paul Rubens, in the National Gallery, London. It was probably painted around 1622–1625.

Pamela hat

The Chapeau à la Paméla, Pamela hat or Pamela bonnet described a type of straw hat or bonnet popular during the 1790s and into the first three quarters of the 19th century. It was named after the heroine of Samuel Richardson's 1741 novel Pamela; or, Virtue Rewarded. While Pamela hats and bonnets underwent a variety of changes in shape and form, they were always made from straw. The mid-19th-century version of the Pamela hat was a smaller version of an early 19th-century wide-brimmed style called the gipsy hat.

<i>The Italian Straw Hat</i> (play) Comedy by Eugène Labiche and Marc-Michel

The Italian Straw Hat is a five-act comedy by Eugène Labiche and Marc-Michel. It premiered at the Théâtre du Palais-Royal in Paris on 14 August 1851. It has been adapted for the cinema in French, English, German, Czech and Russian, and as a musical play in English and Italian versions. The piece remains regularly staged in France, where it entered the repertoire of the Comédie-Française in Paris and of theatres in other French cities.

A straw hat is a brimmed hat that is woven out of straw or straw-like materials.