Your toes should be in the 'peep' but should not be hanging over edge of shoe.
The ancient Chinese had closed toed shoes thousands of years ago.
no! wearing opened toed shoes is most definitely appropriate for fall, but it does depend on the longitude ladditude location (weather) of your area, If it's bitter cold, i'd recomend wearing boots or wool mocosins. (a cute sweater to top it off :). ) The ranges between 55 (50 may be pushing it) and up would be fine. casual and cute. I'd wear open toed shoes like (peep toe high heels, kitten heels or peep toe dress flats or just regular flats) sandals, flip flops etc are pushing it. and un fashionable. good luck xxx marvin
Closed-toed is the correct spelling to describe shoes that cover the toes entirely.
Scientists wear closed toed shoes during labs to protect their feet from objects and substances that might be dropped, spilled, splashed, etc. Where the objects might be particularly heavy they may even choose to use "steel-toed" shoes to protect their toes from crushing.
Yes.
yes, close-toed shoes are required in the dental office. You would want them all leather as well. Close-toed shoes are to prevent you from catching any infectious disease, for example from a contaminated sharp instrument they may have accidently dropped.
when its not rainy?
Steel toed shoes will not amputate your toes. There are, however, severe situations under which they will be unable to protect your toes. Those are conditions under which you would also loose your toes if you were not wearing safety-to shoes.
Closed-toed shoes or leather shoes provide better protection for the feet against spills, chemicals, and falling objects in a laboratory setting. Canvas or open-toed shoes may not provide adequate protection against these hazards, increasing the risk of injury to the feet during experiments. It is important to prioritize safety in laboratory environments to prevent accidents and minimize potential harm.
Yes, you should.
Yes, she wears opened-toed sandals.
overalls overcoat oxford shirt open-toed shoes oxfords (oxfords = traditional shoes with laces)