The Dawson arrived in the Kith Monday Program drop cycle as a bucket hat dressed up in vocabulary it can't quite back with construction: brushed wool blend shell, sheep suede brim, a name borrowed from a phrase about community.
The Verdict
At $155, this is a fine hat for someone already inside the Kith orbit. For anyone outside it, the materials don't add up to the price, and the versatility score is honest: this goes with fewer things than you'd hope.
The Make
The shell is a brushed blend running 78% cotton and 20% wool, with 2% nylon holding it together. The fabric reads as denim in texture and colorway, not in composition. The brim is sheep suede, which is the most interesting material choice here and also the one that complicates your life most: care instructions aren't published on the product page, and dry cleaning is the practical recommendation for anything with a suede brim. Plan accordingly.
Construction notes from the brand point to direct embroidery on the front panel and a cotton poplin lining. The embroidery is clean. The poplin lining is standard. Country of origin is not disclosed, which at this price point is a reasonable thing to notice.
The &Kin label is Kith's in-house design line, positioned as the brand's own-voice apparel offering rather than a collaboration. The Dawson sits within that, which means it carries the Kith name without the co-branding premium of, say, the Versace or Armani collab pieces. Make quality scores a 5 out of 10 in our assessment. That's not a failure. It's a hat priced at $155, not a hat priced at $350. It's also not a hat priced at $55.
The Fit
One size, regular cut, true to size. Bucket hats in OS are either a size for you or they aren't. The crown depth and brim width read as consistent with Kith's other headwear. Nothing unusual to report here.
The Context
The bucket hat category has gotten crowded in the last several years. At $155, you are competing with Borsalino's simpler wool offerings on the lower end and with Beams Plus or Norse Projects on the constructed end. The Dawson's suede brim differentiates it visually, but that detail cuts versatility rather than adding it. The founder's versatility score of 3 out of 10 reflects that correctly. This is a specific-occasion hat, not a throw-it-on-and-go hat.
The travel-friendliness score of 8 out of 10 is worth noting. It packs reasonably flat, and the brushed texture doesn't punish you for stuffing it into a carry-on. That's the clearest use case: weekend trip, one hat, don't mind dry cleaning it when you're back.
Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. The suede brim is the detail I keep coming back to, and not entirely in a good way. It's distinctive, it photographs well, and it means you're not wearing this in the rain. For $155 and one-size-only, you want to be sure the occasion count is there before you commit.



