For over 40 years, a Spanish company—Fernandez y Roche, based in Seville, Spain—has supplied tens of thousands of black hats annually to yeshiva bochurim, avreichim, and balabatim in communities across America. These hats, worn daily by bnei Torah from the age of bar mitzvah and onward, are not merely a garment, but a statement of identity and dignity.
But that longstanding partnership is now at risk. Due to newly imposed trade tariffs by the U.S. government on European goods, including imported felt hats, Fernandez y Roche has been hit with a 10% import fee, with a looming possibility of an additional 50% tariff.
Abraham Mazuecos, Managing Director of the 140-year-old hatmaker, expressed deep concern. “Our margins are very tight,” he said, “and we expect demand to decline as a result.” The company currently supplies approximately 30,000 hats annually to the Orthodox Jewish communities in New York and New Jersey—making up around half of its exports in this sector. The other half goes to kehillos in Eretz Yisroel.
For many, this isn’t just a business disruption—it could soon become a practical challenge. The typical black felt hat, often replaced every few years due to wear or changing styles, can cost up to $380. And while hat manufacturers exist in the United States, Mazuecos pointed out that many are geared toward producing cowboy hats and similar styles, not the refined, traditional designs worn by bnei Torah.
“There simply isn’t a local replacement that fits the expectations of our clientele,” he explained.
What’s more, the impact may be felt not only on an individual level, but within the infrastructure of the frum clothing market as a whole. Many local retailers, especially those who serve yeshiva communities and rely on steady imports of these hats, are watching the situation closely. If tariffs continue to rise and supply is interrupted, it could force stores to seek inferior alternatives—or raise prices significantly.
With a July 9 deadline looming for trade negotiations between the U.S. and the European Union, there is still some hope that a resolution will be reached. But should talks fail, this cherished accessory—so central to the levush of a ben Torah—may become harder to access and more costly to replace.
15 comments:
I think it’s time someone in the USA started producing traditional black hats
this is the sick authors hate for charedei jews belching this up, there are many manufactures of black hats out there. sad that this gloating is news worthy, so sicko lets not so giddy too fast.
You disgruntled ex-Charedishe & Left Wing Modern Orthodox hate Charedim so much that what are you going to do if we wear Srugies? Switch to keffiyes?
Toonerbeigel
In Lakewood there are competing heimishe guys starting to make yeshivishe hats
They will have no one to blame but themselves. A nice, black Scala hat on ebay costs a fraction of the price and is waterproof so no more with the stupid looking plastic hat bag but it's not the right brand, is it.
why can't there be a hat manufacturing company in USA?
I don’t think Moshe R si uand Aharon wore black hats.
You yourself before you put on your Talis, you wrap your tallis around your head exactly like a "keffiyah" ..Read the Mishna Berura!
Modern Orthodox don't "hate Chareidim" in fact they love every Jew, its the Charedim that hate anyone that doesn't look like them or dress like them or smell like them!
DIN is a budding comedian in insinuating that he & his Moderner buddies love Charedim no matter what they smell like. I seem to remember him getting mileage out of a shtikel in Der Yid about what some Satmar chevra feel is ostensibly a Minhag Yisruel to not shower except erev Shabbos vYomtov, hardy har har!
Dubiously naive.Charedim are reacting to how they were slammed around by the modox in the '50s
"Modern Orthodox don't "hate Chareidim" in fact they love every Jew"
As if you have no idea which Modern Ortho neighborhoods are hostile to the "Black Hats", even grumbling about them out loud, sometimes lacing into them. You are full of it, DIN. And as you would have prounounced in a 'previous life', dee bist a Ligner
Borsalino is not a Spanish company.
The tummel was about Roche which is Spanish. But DIN has a one track mind to bash Charedim and since Borsalino is a brand more commonly associated with the ‘Black Hats’, hence the discussion has been moderated “for clarity”
If DIN is preempted by atifas Yishmoelim at Shacharis, which means the Mishna Brura is going with the Vilna Gaon, then he can wear a Fez. That might make him look like even more of a Dingbat than if he wears a Satmar platchikel! Rock the Casbah! Rock the Casbah!
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