High in Lebanon's rugged mountains, hat maker Youssef Akiki is among the last artisans practising the 1,000-year-old skill of making the traditional warm woollen caps once widely worn against the icy winter chill. Akiki believes he may be the last commercial maker of the sheep's wool "labbadeh", a name derived from the Arabic for felt, or "labd", a waterproof and warm cap coloured off-white, grey, brown or black. "The elders of the village make their own labbadehs", says Akiki, 60. The craftsman, from the snow-covered village of Hrajel, perched more than 1,200 metres up in the hills overlooking<a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/lebanon/" target="_blank"> Lebanon</a>'s Mediterranean coast, says that making the hats is a careful process. After drying sheep's wool in the sun, he moulds it with his hands using water and Aleppo soap, which includes olive oil and laurel leaf extracts, to turn it into felt. "It helps the wool shrink, so it becomes malleable, like dough", he says, showing his hands, rough with years of work. It is a slow process that allows him to fashion "three labbadehs in one day, at most", he says. Although the hats are practical and warm, few people wear them today. Those buying the caps are mainly tourists, or Lebanese nostalgic for their childhood, and they often buy them not to wear but to display at home. "The state should guarantee us markets and places to exhibit," he says. Income from the hat trade is not enough to survive on and Akiki also works as a farmer, especially given the economic crisis that has gripped Lebanon in recent years. Lebanon's economic turmoil has left many struggling to make ends meet, and the poverty rate has reached 80 per cent of the population, according to the UN. Akiki believes the labbadeh design is rooted in the caps worn by the ancient <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/michael-karam-lebanon-needs-to-go-back-to-the-good-old-days-of-the-phoenicians-1.26094" target="_blank">Phoenicians</a>, although their style was "more elongated". Today, to encourage more customers, he is dabbling with more modern designs and, to keep the skills alive, is training his nephews in the time-honoured craft.