- steel-toe boot (also
known as a
safety boot, steel-capped boot,
steel toecaps or
safety shoe) is a
durable boot or shoe that has a
protective reinforcement...
- to
strengthen the heel, and an iron toe-piece. They may also have
steel toecaps. The
hobnails project below the sole and
provide traction on soft or rocky...
- material, such as
English clogs. For more protection, they may have
steel toecaps and/or
steel reinforcing inserts in the
undersides of the
soles open sandal...
- Boots, Type B5.
These were made from
brown leather and
generally lacked toecaps. They
featured hobnailed soles. The
British Army
introduced the DMS (Direct...
- now can
usually be seen with a
thick rubber sole, and
often with
steel toecaps.
While gumboots are
often used in workplaces, such as
underground mines...
- had
become studs.
Boots of this era were made of
heavy leather, had hard
toecaps, and came high
above a player's ankles. As the game
began to
spread to...
-
original manufacturer, was
founded in the
nineteenth century, but the
steel toecaps were the
result of war-work. In
World War II, many new
recruits to the...
-
maintained the
class distinction in that only
officers wore
shoes with
toecaps. Similarly,
officers wore
unlined brown leather gloves while airmen's gloves...
- with a state-of-the-art ten-gear
derailleur system, and was ****ed with
toecaps and saddlebag. This was
followed into
production with the more specialist...
-
easier for them to move silently.
During World War II, a
pattern without the
toecap was used by the
Canadian Army and was
issued to the
Royal Air
Force and...