VanDutch Report post Posted March 6, 2014 Hey guys.. We call flipflops here Chinese workboots. Yesterday being particularly warm I was in the workroom in flipflops and was working on sewing a difficult thick item. I accidentently knocked my awl off the bench and it hit my foot. I shrugged it off and decided to pick it up later. After a couple of minutes i bent down to pickup my awl. Couldn't see it on the floor. Looked further and there it was sticking out from the top of my foot... Didn't hurt a bit...only went in about 3mm... Lesson learned. Wear appropriate footwear.. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
horseplay Report post Posted March 7, 2014 This is so true! My family owned a sign shop for many years that I helped manage. I spent alot of time in production with an exacto knife in my hand. There were a few times a knife would roll off the worktable and I would jump to make sure I didn't get it in the foot. Because of that we instituted a no sandal or open shoe policy. Of course it didn't keep me from slicing open my fingers a time or two. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ed in Tx Report post Posted March 7, 2014 I guess on the positive side you didn't lose the awl and it was within reach to pick it up! Ouch! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shtoink Report post Posted March 8, 2014 I wear flip-flops all the time. It's become instinctual to just dodge instead of trying to catch a sharp/pointy object falling. I remember seeing my mother catch a kitchen knife with her toe, much in the same manner you described. It's like dropping buttered toast. The odds are, it'll nearly always land butter side down for a fresh coating of floor-pepper. I've had far too many close calls to count... X-acto knives and I go way back. At the age of about 8, I was allowed to use one for some unknown reason and at one point used the top of my thigh as a cutting board. It didn't take long before I had shoved it up to the hilt into my leg a few inches above my knee. Countless finger slicings later, I still have to be wary of forgetting that there's a knife in my hand when I reach to scratch my face or rub my eye. That's usually the point that I need to set things down and take a break. I've also had to implement a "No Power Tools and Alcohol" rule. I've seen far too many bad things happen after someone says, "Hey, hold my beer..." that it just seemed the right thing to do. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
silverback Report post Posted March 8, 2014 The thing I hate is when I drop my scalpel and the normal reaction "for a bloke anyway" is to clap your legs together to catch it and then you realise "just let it drop.". I think I read somewhere men will automaticly close their legs trying to stop a falling object whereas women will open their legs and let their dress catch it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Northmount Report post Posted March 8, 2014 The thing I hate is when I drop my scalpel and the normal reaction "for a bloke anyway" is to clap your legs together to catch it and then you realise "just let it drop.". I think I read somewhere men will automaticly close their legs trying to stop a falling object whereas women will open their legs and let their dress catch it. You must have read Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn when they were disguised as girls! Tom Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
J Hayes Report post Posted March 8, 2014 Hahaha, I was told the same thing once, so Silverback is not alone. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites