Best safety footwear according to redditors

We found 52 Reddit comments discussing the best safety footwear. We ranked the 38 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Subcategories:

Safety boot & show covers
Safety shoes
Safety boots

Top Reddit comments about Safety Footwear:

u/Man_acquiesced · 86 pointsr/AmItheAsshole

> a pair of slippers for her exclusive use

I was going to recommend those blue slip-cover, but then I saw these (link).

NTA. Let us know how she likes them.

u/H720 · 57 pointsr/INEEEEDIT

Exactly. This is more of a post to look at and go, "oh cool." Rather than to purchase for your home.

I saw a way cheaper version on Amazon linked in the other thread:

https://www.amazon.com/Automatic-Dispenser-MS2-305-Emperor-Gadgets/dp/B00LO5VYXC

It's $70 and essentially just used rubber bands instead of shrink wrap. It isn't powered either.

u/SexlessNights · 30 pointsr/Wellthatsucks

Probably has this on

u/ItchyPooter · 14 pointsr/Wetshaving

I dunno, maybe these?

u/Turning-Leaf · 13 pointsr/preppers

I used to work in a work boot store, so let me give you some tips on boot care.

  • I would highly recommend changing out whatever laces your boots come with to leather laces. Leather laces last longer and can be cut to length.

  • If you kneel a lot and the toes of your boots are rubbing on the ground, I'd get Boot Saver Toe Guards. They'll extend the life of your boots a bit further.

  • At the end of the day, wipe whatever is on your boots off. It doesn't have to sparkle, just get the majority of the gunk off.

  • Anywhere from once a week to once every two weeks, wax or oil your boots. I recommend Obenauf's, but any leather wax/oil will do. Huberd's Shoe Grease is a good alternative if you're looking for something cheaper.

  • Alternate between two pairs of boots. Two $100 pairs of boots will (usually) last longer than one $200 pair of boots.

    If there was one boot that fit all of your criteria, that company would be the only boot maker in the world. If you're looking for a boot that will work year round, I'd get something with GoreTex for waterproofing and then wear thick wool socks in the winter. Also, get something with a Vibram sole. Those tend to last the longest in my experience. My recommendations are as follows:

  • Danner Vicious 4.5" Plain Toe is a good general purpose boot. It does have a GoreTex liner, a Vibram sole, and tends to be pretty comfortable. If you have wide feet, this does tend to run wider through the ball of the foot. Cons, it has a glued on sole(usually doesn't last as long as stitch-down soles) and a composite shank(doesn't offer as much support as a steel shank). I personally prefer shorter boots, but if you'd like more ankle support, it does come in an 8" version.

  • Georgia's 8" Loggers are styled more like traditional boots. They're great for arch and ankle support if that's more your speed. It does have a non-GoreTex waterproof liner, but Georgia usually does pretty well in that department. Cons, its pretty heavy. Not terribly heavy, but worth mentioning.

    Of course, every foot is different, so definitely find a local boot store and try a few options on.
u/makeawitchfoundation · 8 pointsr/AmItheAsshole

YTA because you're enabling his negative behavior. This world is so hard and people don't bend over backwards for autistic people. You need to teach him that not everything can go his way otherwise his life will be one huge struggle. You're husband seems to be the only sensible parent. This could of been a huge life lesson to teach him how to compromise. Here's an easy solution. If he is still not being amicable than he needs to stay in his room because you're the adult here.

u/guy-in-the-comments · 5 pointsr/Showerthoughts

Shoe Covers - Amazon

That’s where you’re wrong kiddo

u/nails_bjorn · 5 pointsr/Slackline

>over $600 to start

If you want a cheaper version of the above, without having to buy all the Slacktivity equipment (I live in the USA, so importing all that comes out as quite pricey), you can do the following:

  • Buy 2 cheap stainless shackles and approximately 20-30 feet of 1 inch tubular webbing (any type will do). Tie a frost knot (or an overhand on a bite with extra slack will do, as there is essentially 0 force on this ever) in one end of the webbing, and make your own soft release.
  • 3 - 5 of these 1 inch pulleys off of amazon. Use a grinder/hacksaw/drill to grind off the metal nub on the end, and go to the hardware store to buy some locking nuts, washers, and a 1.75" bolt.
  • Some skate bearings off of amazon (4 bearings per homemade webbing pulley). These go over the bolts, with washers in between, of the pulleys that you took apart to make a homemade set of these. Buy some cheap pear carabiners to go with them. You have now made your own highslides/cheap hangovers for 1/3 - 1/2 the price depending on how many you wanted.
  • Find a 3d printing service near you and 3D print your own linegrips. Buy some very thin rubber (most people recommend the 1 mm vibram sheets, but I used this cheaper one and it works fine) and super glue, thread it with ~6mm cordelette and you have your own linegrip. Do this as many times as you want.
  • Tie some cordelette into bunny-ears knots with differing lengths on each one, and clip your homemade webbing pulleys to each loop. The loop lengths should be long enough that your webbing pulleys don't hit each other. Clip one of the sets of webbing pulleys to your home-printed linegrip, and the other set to anywhere on your anchor. These are your homemade soft RPs.
  • You need 1 weblock. For price, instead of buying 2 stainless shackles, just get 1 and buy the cat-on-slack soft release to hook in directly to your soft release. Or get the normal weblock they sell and hook it onto your stainless shackle. For weight, get a weblock that does not have sharp edges at the connection point and use a soft shackle (discussed below) to connect it to your soft release (like the alpine weblock or use a purelock to go straight into your soft release, both of which are pricey).
  • Don't buy pre-constructed soft shackles, as they gouge you for the price. Buy your own 1/4" amsteel and make your own soft shackles (1 or 2 is fine for long-lining, make 4 or 5 for highlining as you will swap these out for the steel ones on your soft release).
  • For anchors themselves, buy static rope. There are plenty of options out there, and what thickness/weight/breaking strength you want depends on your personal priorities in anchor construction, so I won't make a specific recommendation to you. Canyoneering static rope tends to be better in terms of weight/breaking strength, but is pricier. Depends on what you want.

    This allows you to use the above posted method, even up to a 27:1 mechanical advantage (if you 3d printed 3 linegrips, with 5 pulleys so you could put 2 extra 3:1 multipliers on a 3:1 system) without losing efficiency. Rigging 100m in the park is impossible just using normal carabiners; you really need the webbing pulleys/hangovers. Best of all, you've accomplished this at a fraction of the price of buying pre-made gear, and none of your janky homemade pulleys or linegrips are life-dependent pieces of gear if you went highlining.
u/MrNationwide · 4 pointsr/gifs

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00LO5VYXC/

Seems like this does the same job without needing electricity

u/danltn · 3 pointsr/AskUK

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B000WGD3XI

This sort of thing should be just fine waterproof-wise higher up. It's neoprene with a rubber shell. Neoprene is softer than rubber so more comfortable.

u/Agent_Black_K · 3 pointsr/oddlysatisfying

If you're committing crimes every night, it sounds like you'd be making money from it.
EDIT: also this.

u/BonhamsFourSticks · 3 pointsr/femalefashionadvice

I use Spenco insoles in all my boots with replaceable insoles. FWIW, my boyfriend really likes the green and yellow heavy duty comfort insoles in his Blundstones, but I prefer the total support ones.

u/a3akbari · 3 pointsr/Dentistry

I have the same issue and I turned to insoles; it's been a game changer.. I really like these insoles off amazon:

1

2

3

u/JosephFaolan · 3 pointsr/aspergers

I think they would look silly, but they would not feel any different probably. Here is a potential solution: http://www.amazon.com/Disposable-Polypropylene-Covers-100-Pack-DSC100/dp/B000ICKO88/

I hope you work it out.

u/Goliathus123 · 2 pointsr/AdviceAnimals
u/-bxp · 2 pointsr/GamingLaptops

Treat yourself and buy one of the Xiaomi sets, which you can get cheaper elsewhere. It's a quality set in a really nice storage case that will cover all your needs including philips, flat-head and torx bits. Future proof and will last a lifetime, rather than the plastic container that will crack and you lose your screwdrivers.

u/chrisbrl88 · 2 pointsr/HomeImprovement

Yes, they'll show up. It'll need sanded back out and redone, especially since you used a cleaner on it. After the stain is applied, great care has to be taken to not walk on the floor in anything but CLEAN socks. If shoes have to be worn, shoe covers should be used. This is a pretty expensive learning experience.

What kind of stain did you use and what kind of finish are you planning on using, out of curiosity? Floors are too much work to use hardware store Minwax on.

u/forceofslugyuk · 1 pointr/aww

I had the same thought. No way would that be happening in my house. Shoes off at the door plz, If it ever became an issue for people i'd just buy this for them to use at my place. Problem solved.

u/crashdummie · 1 pointr/malefashionadvice

Had this problem: length is perfect, but my heel was a little too narrow for the shape of the boot.

Get heel grips like these: https://www.amazon.ca/ASIV-Adhesive-Cushions-Protector-Blisters/dp/B01M9FCVCE/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1542126695&sr=8-3&keywords=heel+grips

You can have them sown, or glue them with shoe goo, which is more reliable than the stock adhesive. You can even stack two on top of another if one isn't quite enough.

u/LagunaGTO · 1 pointr/AutoDetailing

I ask the client, but it's usually very rare. Working so much that my body uses all the water I'm drinking or did drink.

Carry these just in case.

u/shtevert · 1 pointr/Sneakers
u/AFK_Tornado · 1 pointr/BuyItForLife

Buy well-constructed boots that can be resoled easily. Welted boots are probably your friend.

Have two pairs of boots and cycle them. The soles will still eventually need replacing, and the uppers will still probably eventually wear out eventually, but a great pair of work boots should last far more than a year of wear with regular maintenance.

Bringing me to maintenance: If you're working construction you probably need to give them a good clean every couple of months, then reapply your wax/oil/preservative of choice.

For concrete work, use overboots like this or this.Something like this might help with the extreme toe wear you're experiencing (...seriously, how did you do that?). Those things will wear out, too, but in the spirit of BIFL the rubber is a lot more sustainable to replace than leather, both on your wallet and on the environment.

u/quickthrowaway6 · 1 pointr/buildapc

^^...no

On a still silly but ever so slightly more serious note, it turns out that a cleanroom gown with electro-static discharge protection is only about $200-300: gown, shoes, shoe covers, gloves. Just put it all on and hang up a sign declaring your place an ISO 9 cleanroom!

u/xrobin · 1 pointr/Ultralight

Ray Jardine sewed his own 0.8oz shower booties out of coated nylon and elastic, to avoid athletes foot in public showers. Maybe you could find something like that or make your own?

u/WDRBY · 1 pointr/rollerderby

I think insoles are your best bet.

When I run, I use 'motion control' shoes and insoles to prevent the exact same thing you are describing. When I skate, I use insoles too and it helps alot.

/u/cyanicenine is correct, custom insoles are best.
However, if you do not have custom insole specialists available, you might want to try these:

http://www.amazon.com/Spenco-Polysorb-Total-Support-Womens/dp/B000Q8NDEQ/ref=sr_1_21?ie=UTF8&qid=undefined&sr=8-21&keywords=insoles

These are what I use in my skates, and they work pretty well for me. Everyone has a different foot, so your milage may vary.

I had a arch injury a few years ago as well, and while that healed I also taped up my arch. I tried KT tape, but I could never get it work correctly. What I eventually did was use regular sports tape and this technique:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDyk7suigUw

u/bostcdfun · 1 pointr/crossdressing

Both wooden:
https://www.amazon.com/KevenAnna-Premium-Professional-Wooden-Stretcher/dp/B01A6VM190/ref=sr_1_5?crid=2SL8LR8F5HL1B&keywords=high+heel+shoe+stretcher+women%27s+large+8.5-11&qid=1565012843&s=gateway&sprefix=high+heel+stretcher+women+larg%2Caps%2C193&sr=8-5

And plastic:
https://www.amazon.com/Professional-Stretcher-HuKimGee-Adjustable-US9-5-13/dp/B07H3M7RX7/ref=sr_1_12?crid=2SL8LR8F5HL1B&keywords=high+heel+shoe+stretcher+women%27s+large+8.5-11&qid=1565012895&s=gateway&sprefix=high+heel+stretcher+women+larg%2Caps%2C193&sr=8-12

..options exist. Personally I like the plastic but they both work. Let’s face it, males have anatomical differences, where even a well fit shoe hurts, Any decent shoe will stretch to fit, but it can be uncomfortable or discouraging (if you tried a night with 4” heels on having only stood in them in the past, you’d be in bad shape) to tough that out. There’s no need!

Put the stretcher in a slightly uncomfortable shoe, twist back the vertical stretcher and twist open then horizontal one (Until tight, much tighter than your foot would ever be). Within 24-48 hours, the shoes will fit comfortably.! Just take care not to stretch too long, it does have the power to overly loosen heels.

Finally, they come with black nubs, put these where your toes are or general trouble spots are, to make an extra bit of room. I was aware of these but hadn’t tried until lately, wow was I missing out. A couple shoes that were basically intolerable i hadn’t used in forever, but this has made them my new favorites.

Some are as low as $10.. do it!

u/notarascal · 1 pointr/AskACobbler

No you can't just remove a heel like that and expect to have a functioning boot.

Would an overshoe work?

https://www.amazon.com/OSHATOES-Overshoe-Adjustable-Approved-NON-Slip/dp/B07HLYYNRR

u/pixelprophet · 1 pointr/ChoosingBeggars

After that initial message, where he tosses in the "you wore your boots, no big deal", at that exact point I knew they were going to try and fuck you over. I would have declined working with them based on that alone stating that you've unable to schedule them based on a down payment from another client. Good on you for staying professional.

FYI: Toss something like these in your truck and you won't have to worry about that shit and its $9:
https://smile.amazon.com/Disposable-Polypropylene-Covers-100-Pack-DSC100/dp/B000ICKO88



u/Inigo93 · 0 pointsr/ATBGE

Doubt those are steel toed crocs. Those are someone wearing crocs who then put on some OSHAToes or a similar product.

Short version: They're safety toes that slip on over normal shoes. Many industrial areas will keep them for when they have a visitor who needs to see the place but didn't come wearing steel toes. So you slip 'em on and you're OSHA compliant.