Description
Canvas backpack with leather details - Skuba model
Material:
- Canvas and Leather
Dimensions:
- Height: 50 cm
- Width: 39 cm
- Hat compartment depth: 17 cm
- Backpack depth: 10 cm
- Total depth: 37 cm
- Shoulder straps: Adjustable
€312,00
The Skuba backpack, made of canvas in coriander colour with cinnamon leather details, is an object of pure design and functionality, with a unique and non-conformist look. It takes its cue from vintage hatboxes and Korean "Gat Boxes". Its peculiarity is the internal compartment dedicated to containing the hat, projecting its shape outwards as if to unequivocally declare its contents. This compartment is protected by a semi-rigid shell with the function of protecting your hat during short or long journeys, business or pleasure trips. The main pocket is separate from the hat compartment and is roomy enough to hold your PC and documents, rather than your clothes and various accessories. Internally it is equipped with pockets, mobile phone compartment and key hook.
Out of stock
Canvas backpack with leather details - Skuba model
Material:
Dimensions:
Colour | Brown, Green |
---|---|
Material | Leather, Fabric |
Choosing the right hat size is always a critical moment, also because every hat made by hand and then sold in hat shops has very different sizes compared to the classic ones that clothing shops have accustomed us to.
Hat sizes are calculated in centimetres and range from size 55 (the smallest) to 62 (the largest). There is a very simple and quick procedure to find out which size is right for you.
To calculate your correct hat size all you have to do is take a tape measure, measure the circumference of your head by holding the tape measure just one centimetre above your ears, which is the point where your hat will fit perfectly.
If you don't have a tape measure, you can calculate the size simply by using a piece of string, a string or a shoelace from your shoes: in the same way as before, use the tape measure to calculate the circumference, mark with a pen or a felt-tip pen the point where the two parts of the shoelace meet and then use a ruler or a normal tape measure to measure the shoelace.