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    Thumbnail 1 of 6, Bucket Hat, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
    Thumbnail 2 of 6, Bucket Hat, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
    Thumbnail 3 of 6, Bucket Hat, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
    Thumbnail 4 of 6, Bucket Hat, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
    Thumbnail 5 of 6, Bucket Hat, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
    Thumbnail 6 of 6, Bucket Hat, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron.
    Bucket Hat, Divinity - pattern designed and sold by IschemicNeuron
    ColorSand

    Divinity - pattern Bucket Hat

    Designed and sold by IschemicNeuron
    $22.90
    $26.94 (15% off)
    15% off ends soon
    Size
    $22.90
    $26.94 (15% off)

    Product features

    • This packable, scrunchable, lightweight headwear classic is ready for adventure, from the beach to the street to the trail
    • Breathable 100% cotton with eyelet ventilation
    • Flat top
    • Moderate brim is 2.2in (5.5 cm) wide to keep the sun off your face
    • Unstructured crown is 3.1in (8 cm) deep
    • Easy care: just spot clean and dry in shade
    • Since every item is made just for you by your local third-party fulfiller, there may be slight variances in the product received
    Artwork thumbnail, Divinity - pattern by IschemicNeuron
    Divinity - pattern
    Background is based on astronomical illustrations of the moon by the astronomer Maria Clara Eimmart. From Wiki: "Maria Clara Eimmart (27 May 1676 – 29 October 1707), was a German astronomer, engraver and designer. She was the daughter and assistant of Georg Christoph Eimmart the Younger. Eimmart is best known for her exact astronomical illustrations done in pale pastels on dark blue cardboard. Between 1693 and 1698, Eimmart made over 350 drawings of the phases of the moon. This collection of drawings, drawn solely from observations through a telescope, was entitled Micrographia stellarum phases lunae ultra 300. Twelve of these were given to Luigi Ferdinando Marsili, a scientific collaborator of her father's, and ten survive in Bologna, together with three smaller studies on brown paper. Eimmart’s continuous series of depictions became the basis for a new lunar map."

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