This high quality, nylon belt features the iconic Hick's Hexagon pattern famously featured as the carpet in film The Shining. The belt's length is 48 inches long. Fast Shipping. Satisfaction guaranteed. More on the design and it's history: The website filmandfurnature.com says, "Stanley Kubrick's 1980 film The Shining features the Hicks Hexagon carpet in several scenes which include Danny’s first encounter with room 237 as he investigates on his tricycle. The carpet’s orange, brown and red color leap out at us from the screen, so it’s no surprise that it has become the most iconic carpet to ever feature in film. David Hicks (1929-1998) is one of the most outstanding interior designers of all time. His fusion of pattern, color, antique and contemporary has influenced many designers of both home and fashion. His early clients mixed aristocracy, media and fashion. He married Lady Pamela Mountbatten in 1960 and was soon making carpets for Windsor Castle and decorating the Prince of Wales’ first apartment at Buckingham Palace. Hicks did not however collaborate on the filming of The Shining. The ‘Hicks’ Hexagon’ carpet was in production in the 1960s prior to The Shining‘s release in 1980, and the carpet which appeared in The Overlook Hotel was either an off-the shelf purchase for the film or a copy made for filming. The blog The Hawaiian Sybarite says “Hicks’ most famous pattern, Hicks’ Hexagon, and his connection with the dark, satanic energy that consumes Jack Torrance in [The Shining] is no coincidence”. To explain why Hicks’ Hexagon carpet was chosen for this now famous film set, we can offer up five of our own theories. Firstly, because of its unnerving, mesmerizing and vivid presence which adds a sense of foreboding.