Business | Traders of a lost art

Indiana Jones and the fedora boom

Indy’s latest caper proves a help to hatters

Destiny Poet Hat seen in the window of Herbert Johnson, London
Image: Richard Boll

In a summer crowded with blockbusters, Disney may sweat to recoup the $295m it reportedly spent making “Dial of Destiny”, the fifth and final Indiana Jones film, out on June 30th in America. But the movie is already a hit for a firm in another industry. Herbert Johnson, a 134-year-old London hatmaker, is fielding soaring demand for a certain fedora.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Traders of a lost art”

From the July 1st 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Business

A trader looks at screens on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

DeepSeek sends a shockwave through markets

A cheap Chinese language model has investors in Silicon Valley asking questions

An eagle sweating in his bed with a sign showing a red downward arrow attached to the end of the bedframe

Germans are world champions of calling in sick

It’s easy and it pays well


The illustration shows a man and a woman standing on separate stacks of coins.

Knowing what your colleagues earn

The pros and cons of greater pay transparency


A $500bn investment plan says a lot about Trump’s AI priorities

It’s build, baby, build

Donald Trump’s America will not become a tech oligarchy

Reasons not to panic about the tech-industrial complex

OpenAI’s latest model will change the economics of software

The more reasoning it does, the more computer power it uses