It depends. There are 'tourist hats' sold at local markets and handcraft stalls for less than 50 pesos US$4.50 but there are professional-made sombreros than can cost up to 5000 pesos (US$455).
Mexican Sombrero
in Mexico outside
From the city of Guadalajara, on western Mexico. By the way, the hat dance is known as Jarabe Tapatio in Mexico.
The Mexican Hat Dance is a Mexican dance where a man and a woman are dancing around a sombrero, kicking and flirting, and wearing Poblana's (womens costume) and men wear a Charro ( Mexican cowboy outfit).
it began in Mexico when a man needed a hat, so he did a hat dance. (for more information, see "rain dance")
The Mexican Hat Dance
Sombrero (literal Spanish translation of "hat")
This is the national song of Mexico. In the United States, we call this song "The Mexican Hat Dance."
yes. it is a Mexican hat.
A Jarabe is a Mexican folk dance, One, 'El Jarabe Tapatio' (a tapatio is a person from Guadalajara), became popularized outside Mexico as the Mexican hat dance.
No. There are several types of hats currently used in Mexico, but the stereotypical "sombrero" is not one of them. Several people were photographed at the beginning of the 20th century during the Mexican Revolution (1910 - 1921), wearing such kind of hats. Nowadays, these are as fashionable to Mexicans as the top hat is to modern-day Americans, or the bowler hat is to Europeans.
it is called a mexican hat