People from nations across East, South, and South-East Asia adorn these conical hats, which hold different significance, style, and legends around it. For practical purposes, these hats protected their wearers from sun or rain while working on farms, sometimes even dipping them in water so the evaporation would keep them cool. While generally made with bamboo and leaves, different countries have certain variations. In Assam, they are often colourfully decorated, in Japan, the samurai wore metal versions of it as helmets. But these hats are most central to Vietnamese culture. Nón lá (‘leaf hat’) as it is known there is surrounded by a legend where a goddess wearing such a hat came down from the heavens during a torrential downpour. The hat protected against all the rain, and the goddess even showed the locals how to grow crops before disappearing. Today, Nón lá are decorated and often have poetry stitched within. Moreover, it is considered part of Vietnam’s national dress.