Fashion

Our Interview With Hat Designer Gigi Burris

Funny ladies in funny hats is a phrase that enters my mind often when I'm strolling on the Upper East Side. For years, delicate headwear and polished hats have always been associated with the glamorous women of yesteryear—the ones who prioritized craftsmanship over fast-fashion trend items (guilty as charged!) and whose Google calendars were filled with art gallery openings and charity luncheons, armed with wit, charisma, and a closet full of vintage heirloom finds. In my mind, millenery, and the fantastical hats that come along with it, has been a space reserved for established women of a certain social caliber—that is, until I saw my millennial, Dimes Square–adjacent therapist pull up to our Zoom session with a tiny little pillbox hat. The style felt reminiscent of the glamorous gala women I so deeply admired who were plastered across my Pinterest board, and naturally, I had to ask her where she got it. Thus began my obsession with Gigi Burris.

Founded in 2012, the namesake label created by Burris was born out of a deep admiration for the rich history of women's millinery. There's a hat for nearly every occasion—for the trend-forward, Cheetah-obsessed editor going to New York Fashion Week, for the mother of the bride at a British-countryside wedding, for a dapper fashion icon playing around with hats on a new Netflix show (looking at you, Colman Domingo!).

Collage of celebrities and influencers wearing Gigi Burris hats.

With Floridian swamp influences and a Parisian charm, this New York–based label has been swirling in and on the heads of fashion's elite for years. It wasn't until pillbox hats started popping up on the runways and our feeds late last year that the general population began to take notice. Since then, Burris, whose large list of clientele and editorial credits has made her a go-to in the industry, has been inundated with a new kind of luxury customer, one who's intentional about dressing and thoughtful about the items they put in their wardrobe. For any independent brand, an influx of virality can be overwhelming. On the phone, Burris jokes that her Chinatown shop and atelier look like a postage office with the number of packages they're sending out to keep up with demand. But Burris and her team have juggled the exponential growth of her label with utmost excitement and pride.