Summer does not look the same in every market.
And neither should the assortment.
By June, retailers usually have a clearer read on how their own season is taking shape. In some places, felt continues to sell well. In others, warmer weather, local events, and customer habits begin to shift what shoppers reach for.
That difference matters.
For Western retailers, summer is not about following one formula. It is about understanding the local customer and building the assortment accordingly.

One Season Does Not Mean One Answer
A summer assortment in Texas may not look the same as one in Oklahoma, Nevada, or the Carolinas.
Climate plays a role. So do local events, store traffic, customer habits, and the type of Western lifestyle each market supports. That is why broad assumptions can miss the mark.
The strongest retailers do not build the floor around a generic idea of summer. They build it around what their own customers are most likely to wear, trust, and buy.

Watch the Customer More Than the Calendar
The calendar can suggest a season. The customer confirms it.
By the time summer is underway, retailers can usually see what is being tried on, what is being passed over, and what continues to feel right for their floor. That kind of information is more useful than following what another store may be doing in a different market.
Good summer selling starts there.
When retailers stay close to how their customers actually shop, the assortment stays closer to real use, real preferences, and real demand.

Where MHT Fits In
Seasonal demand should support the store, not pull it away from what it is already known for.
That is where a manufacturing partner matters. MHT gives retailers the ability to stay grounded in the shapes, profiles, and overall look their customers already recognize while still supporting seasonal demand where it makes sense.
Because every hat is made to order in Garland, Texas, MHT helps stores build with purpose and stay aligned with the market they serve.
What This Means for Western Retail
Summer does not reward retailers for following a generic seasonal formula.
It rewards the stores that know their customer, understand local demand, and shape the assortment accordingly. In some markets that may mean felt continues to hold strong. In others, lighter warm-weather options may take on a larger role.
The opportunity is not to chase the season. It is to stay aligned with the people buying in it.
For Those Stocking MHT
Every hat is made to order in Garland, Texas.
Catalog orders typically ship in about 30 days
Custom orders typically ship in about 60 days
We cannot guarantee specific ship-by or delivery dates during peak seasons.
972-864-5523 | moc.srettahretsamobfsctd-94d2f0@ecivresremotsuc
FAQ: Master Hatters of Texas
Should every retailer approach summer the same way?
No. Summer demand can vary by region, climate, local events, and customer preference. The strongest assortments reflect the market they are built for.
Does summer always mean moving away from felt?
Not necessarily. Some markets continue to sell felt well through the season, while others may support lighter warm-weather options where it makes sense.
What makes a strong summer assortment?
A strong assortment stays true to the store, reflects the local customer, and supports seasonal demand without forcing a complete shift in identity.