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  2. Australian work boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_work_boot

    Blundstone elastic sided boots. An Australian work boot (or generically elastic-sided boot) is a style of work shoe, typically constructed with a leather upper bound together with elastic sides and pull tabs on the front and back of the boot. The shoe lacks a tongue, and laces, and often contains a steel toe cap for occupational health and ...

  3. Steel-toe boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel-toe_boot

    A pair of well-worn steel-toe shoes A pair of ISO 20345:2004 compliant S3 safety boots. A 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 in the toe which protects the foot from falling objects or compression. Safety shoes are effective ...

  4. Engineer boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engineer_boot

    Wesco's boots were immediately popular with welders in Portland, Oregon-area shipyards, who needed looser fitting shoes that could be quickly removed if embers landed in the shafts. [2] Engineer boots were overtaken in the shoe market during World War II by the production of lace-up combat boots [4] and demand dramatically decreased. [2]

  5. Monkey boots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_Boots

    The monkey boots popular in the UK are known for their unique "tractor-tread" outsoles, yellow laces, and typically brown, black, or oxblood leather, [8] while the monkey boots produced by American work boot companies are known for their distinctive lace-to-toe construction designed for a more secure fit. [9] [10]

  6. Boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boot

    Formerly they were usually shod with hobnails and heel- and toe-plates, but now can usually be seen with a thick rubber sole, and often with steel toecaps. [2] While gumboots are often used in workplaces, such as underground mines, studies have shown that workers prefer "lace up" boots mainly due to their support and better fit. [3]

  7. Footwear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Footwear

    Shoe fetishism was first publicized in the work of Nicolas-Edme Rétif in prerevolutionary France. [20] 17th-century Cavalier boots developed into upper-class fashion and into sailing boots prized by fishermen and pirates before being replaced as military gear by the 18th-century Hessian and 19th-century Wellington boot.