Buntal hat

The buntal hat is a traditional lightweight
Buntal hats were traditionally woven into wide-brimmed farmer's hats for the domestic market. Later versions of the hat using softened fibers and a finer weave are woven into a form resembling the fedora, and it is often mistaken for and sold as the very similar Panama hat or under the name Bangkok hat. These versions are characterized by being durable, yet light, and with a silkier texture than Panama hats. It can also be woven into other forms, including as women's braided wide-brimmed sun hats known as the baliwag hat (also named after the town of Baliwag).[1] Buntal hats are also sometimes known as the parabuntal hat (cf. parasisal), East Indian Panama hat, or Italian straw hat.[2]
Production

Buntal hats are manufactured from buntal fiber extracted from buri palms (
History

Originally, buntal hats were primarily produced in the towns of
By 1910, buntal hat production was a
By 1920s, the hats were being exported by the Philippines, often passed off as the very similar Panama hat or under the name "Bangkok hat". However, in 1923, Chinese producers from Hong Kong hired hat weavers from the Philippines. Having acquired the weaving process, they then began to mass-produce balibuntal hats using buntal fibers imported from the Philippines. This affected the local industry to such an extent that Representative Antonio Villarama tried to pass a bill to ban the export of buntal fiber (though it failed).[4]
Because of competition from Chinese factories, the buntal hat industry waned until the 1960s when it was again revived by the Villones family from Sariaya, Quezon. Their hats were mostly sourced from suppliers from Baliuag, although they also bought hats from nearby towns in Bulacan, Pampanga, and Nueva Ecija. Their hats were primarily exported to the United States, Mexico, and Italy. The family accounted for around a quarter of the total monthly production of buntal hats in the 1960s.[4]
The industry, however, is once again in danger of extinction due to the growing lack of skilled workers and the declining demand. Most remaining weavers of buntal are elderly. The government of Baliuag has been taking measures to promote buntal hats to the local market.[4][5][6]
In 2011, Rosario Quizon-Bautista, one of the last remaining weavers in Baliuag, also started a project to teach buntal weaving skills to inmates in the Bulacan Provincial Jail, due to the lack of interest among youths in Bulacan. She sells raw buntal fiber to the inmates, and buy back finished hats. This provides them with income while also preserving buntal weaving traditions.[7]
In popular culture
Baliwag celebrates a 10-day "Buntal Festival" every May each year.[4][5]
Similar hats
Buntal hats can be mistaken for similar Philippine hats also made from the buri palm, the
Gallery
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Buntal hat from theBaliuag Museum and Library
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Buntal hat with a round crown from theBaliuag Museum and Library
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Woman's buntal hat in a Buntal Festival display in SM City Baliwag
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A buntal hat from Baliwag
See also
References
- ^ a b Pickard, Edward T. (October 21, 1929). "Philippine Production and Foreign Trade in Hats". Commerce Reports (40): 154–156.
- ^ Kneeland, Natalie (1925). Merchandise Manuals for Retail Salespeople: Millinery. A.W. Shaw Company. p. 19.
- ^ "The Hat Growing Palm of the Philippines". San Francisco Call. 112 (30): 4. June 30, 1912.
- ^ .
- ^ a b c Balabo, Dino (May 3, 2009). "Baliuag celebrates buntal weaving". PhilStar Global. Retrieved February 24, 2020.
- ^ "Baliuag appeals to its youth to save the buntal hat". Manila Bulletin. May 28, 2017. Retrieved February 24, 2020.
- ^ Reyes-Estrope, Carmela (May 28, 2011). "Australia discovers hats made by 'weaving inmates of Bulacan'". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved February 24, 2020.