Classroom lesson 路 The non la - Vietnam's conical hat馃嚮馃嚦 Vietnam

The non la - Vietnam's conical hat

A circle of leaves that keeps off the sun and the rain

Three traditional Vietnamese conical hats made of woven palm leaves seen from behind

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The non la is a hat that almost everyone in Vietnam has worn at some point. It is shaped like a wide, gentle cone, made from woven palm leaves, and tied under the chin with a soft ribbon. It is so practical and so pretty that it has become one of Vietnam's best-known symbols.

Tell me more

Vietnam is hot and sunny for much of the year, and the rainy season brings sudden heavy showers. A non la solves both problems at once. The wide brim shades the whole face and shoulders from the sun, like a portable parasol. When the rain comes, the leaves shed water like a tiny roof.

Each hat is made by hand. The maker cuts young palm leaves, dries them flat in the sun, and irons them until they are smooth. Then they stretch the leaves carefully over a bamboo frame in the shape of a cone and stitch them in place with very fine thread. A really good hat can take a whole day to make.

The non la has been around for hundreds of years. In some villages, the same family has been making them for many generations - mothers and grandmothers teaching daughters how to stitch the leaves. Some hats are decorated with poems painted between the layers, only visible when you hold them up to the light.

You'll see non la hats everywhere in Vietnam - in rice fields, on bicycles, at busy city markets, on schoolchildren walking home. They are light enough to wear all day and can be used as a basket, a fan or even a tiny picnic plate when needed.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might a wide cone-shaped hat work better in a hot, rainy country than a flat cap?
  2. 02The non la is made from leaves that grow nearby. What other clever objects have humans invented from things that grow around them?
  3. 03If you could design one item to keep you cool, dry and shaded all day, what shape would it be?
Try this

Classroom activity

Out of paper, fold a flat circle, cut a slit to the centre and overlap the edges to make a wide cone. Tape it together and test it: hold it over your head in the sun, and again under a watering-can shower (outside!). Discuss what shapes work best for shedding water.