Vaunt Drill & Screwdriver Bit Sets
Vaunt workwear covers the day to day graft with site ready clothing, PPE and boots that stand up to snagging, muck, weather and long shifts.
If your kit gets wrecked by kneeling, hauling, cutting and working through bad weather, this is the sort of range worth looking at. Vaunt workwear keeps things simple with practical site gear, from Vaunt Work Clothes and Vaunt PPE through to Vaunt Safety Boots & Trainers. If you already know the Vaunt name for honest trade kit, this is where to get your workwear sorted. Have a look through the Vaunt Shop All range and pick the bits that match your trade.
What Jobs Is Vaunt Workwear Best At?
- Working through first fix and rip out jobs, Vaunt workwear gives you hard wearing layers and trousers that cope better with kneeling, stretching and catching on rough timber, block and metal.
- Moving around busy construction sites, Vaunt safety workwear and hi vis kit help keep you visible when plant, deliveries and multiple trades are all working in the same area.
- Handling cutting, drilling and dusty clean up, Vaunt PPE covers the basic protection you need so you are not caught short when the job changes halfway through the day.
- Walking slabs, scaffold lifts and unfinished floors, Vaunt safety boots give you the grip and toe protection needed for general site use without feeling like a lump by dinner time.
Choosing the Right Vaunt Workwear
Sorting the right kit is simple. Match it to the job, the site rules and how hard you are on your gear.
1. Work Clothes for Daily Graft
If you are on the tools all week, buy Vaunt work clothes that can take kneeling, stretching and constant washing. If it is just occasional use, you can keep it simpler, but daily site lads will want tougher trousers and layers straight away.
2. PPE to Suit the Actual Risk
Do not just throw any PPE in the basket. If you are cutting, grinding or working in dust, make sure your Vaunt PPE matches that task. Basic eye protection for snagging is one thing. Full site protection for messier work is another.
3. Boots Need to Match the Ground
If you are mostly indoors on fit out, lighter Vaunt safety boots or trainers can make long shifts easier. If you are outside on rougher ground, wetter plots or mixed groundworks, go for more support, deeper grip and better all round protection.
4. Hi Vis Depends on Site Conditions
If you are working around traffic, plant or poor light, do not cut corners on Vaunt hi vis. Pick the level of coverage that matches the site rules and the season, especially when jackets and extra layers start covering everything else up.
Who Uses These on Site?
- General builders and labourers reach for Vaunt workwear because it is the sort of everyday kit that handles muck, lifting and repeated wear without needing to be kept precious.
- Sparkies and plumbers use Vaunt work trousers and work clothes for first fix, snagging and van stock runs where they need gear that moves properly when kneeling or working in tight spots.
- Groundworkers, roofers and external teams rely on Vaunt hi vis and safety clothing when the weather turns and the job still has to get done in clear view of plant and traffic.
- Fitters, maintenance teams and site managers keep Vaunt PPE close by for those quick jobs where eye, head or hand protection needs to be there in the bag and ready to use.
The Basics: Understanding Vaunt Workwear and PPE
With workwear and PPE, the main thing is knowing what protects you, what keeps you visible and what simply makes a shift more bearable. Here is the plain version.
1. Workwear Handles the Wear and Tear
Vaunt workwear is the everyday layer that takes the rubbing, kneeling, lifting and weather. Good trousers, jackets and site clothing help you stay comfortable and avoid tearing through cheap gear halfway into the week.
2. PPE Covers the Safety Side
Vaunt PPE is there for the job risks themselves, not just comfort. That means protecting your eyes, hands, head, hearing or breathing when the work changes from simple fitting to cutting, drilling or clearing up.
3. Safety Boots and Hi Vis Are Site Basics
Vaunt safety boots protect your feet from dropped materials, sharp ground and long days on concrete. Vaunt hi vis keeps you seen around plant, deliveries and shared work areas, which matters just as much as comfort once the site gets busy.
Choose the Right Vaunt Workwear for the Job
Pick your kit by task, risk and how rough the site is.
| Your Job | Category or Type | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| General site work and first fix | Vaunt work trousers and tops | Hard wearing fabrics, easy movement, everyday comfort and practical site use |
| Working around traffic, plant or busy compounds | Vaunt hi vis clothing | Clear visibility, site compliant coverage and layers that work over standard workwear |
| Cutting, drilling and dusty snagging jobs | Vaunt PPE | Task specific protection for eyes, hands, head and other common site risks |
| Walking rough plots and unfinished floors all day | Vaunt safety boots | Toe protection, grip, support and better comfort for long shifts on hard ground |
| Indoor fit out with lots of steps each day | Vaunt safety trainers | Lighter feel, easier movement and site suitable protection where allowed |
Common Buying and Usage Mistakes
- Buying by price alone usually means trousers, gloves or boots wear out faster than the rest of your kit. If you are using them every day, spend according to the abuse they will take.
- Picking lightweight footwear for rough external work is a common one. It feels fine in the shop, then your feet know about it by midweek, so match the boot or trainer to the ground conditions.
- Treating all PPE as the same causes problems on site. Safety specs for quick drilling are not the whole answer for heavier cutting or dust, so check the protection matches the task.
- Forgetting site visibility rules can leave you short at the gate. If the job needs hi vis, make sure your jacket, vest or outer layer still keeps you compliant once everything is on.
- Buying one set of workwear for every season is asking for discomfort. Lighter kit works better in summer, while proper outer layers matter once the weather turns and the job still runs.
Work Trousers vs Hi Vis Clothing vs Safety Boots
Vaunt Work Trousers
These are the everyday grafters. Best for trades constantly kneeling, climbing in and out of the van and carrying tools. They will not replace PPE, but they do make the shift easier and usually outlast cheap basic trousers.
Vaunt Hi Vis Clothing
This is about being seen, not just staying warm. It matters on bigger sites, roadside jobs and anywhere plant is moving. If visibility is the main site demand, this takes priority over standard work layers.
Vaunt Safety Boots
If you are on rough ground, unfinished floors or carrying materials all day, boots do the hard work. They are the better buy than lighter footwear when support, grip and toe protection matter more than shaving a bit of weight.
Maintenance and Care
Wash the Graft Out Properly
Mud, plaster, dust and oils soon break workwear down if they are left in. Wash clothing regularly to stop grit sitting in the fabric and wearing it out faster at the knees, hems and seams.
Dry Boots Naturally
If your safety boots are soaked, let them dry out slowly rather than cooking them against direct heat. Too much heat can stiffen materials, damage glues and shorten the life of the upper.
Check PPE Before the Shift
Do not wait until the tool is running to notice damaged PPE. Check for cracked lenses, split gloves, worn straps or tired closures before use and replace bits that are past their best.
Store It Dry and Clean
Leaving clothing and PPE damp in the van all weekend is a good way to ruin it. Air it out, keep it dry and separate dirty site gear from clean kit where you can.
Replace Worn Safety Gear in Time
Workwear can often limp on for another week, but worn out PPE and damaged boots are not worth the gamble. Once protection, grip or visibility is compromised, change it before it catches you out on site.
Why Shop for Vaunt Workwear at ITS?
Whether you need Vaunt work trousers, site clothing, PPE, hi vis or safety boots, we stock the full Vaunt workwear range in one place. It is all in our own warehouse, ready for fast dispatch and next day delivery, so you can get sorted before the next shift starts.
Vaunt Workwear FAQs
What workwear does Vaunt make?
Vaunt makes practical site kit covering work clothes, safety footwear, hi vis and PPE. That includes everyday clothing such as Vaunt work trousers and other layers built for regular trade use, plus the protective bits you need for general site conditions.
Are Vaunt safety boots suitable for construction sites?
Yes, for general construction site use they are a solid option, provided you choose the pair that matches your site rules and working conditions. They are built for the usual mix of toe protection, grip and underfoot support you need on plots, slabs and unfinished floors.
What PPE does Vaunt offer?
Vaunt PPE covers the common site essentials for day to day protection. Depending on the range, that can include protection for eyes, hands, head, hearing and other routine job risks where basic site safety kit needs to be ready in the van or bag.
Is Vaunt workwear CE certified?
Where certification applies, such as PPE and certain safety products, you should check the individual product listing for the exact conformity details. Plain workwear does not always fall under the same certification requirements as protective equipment, so it is worth checking by item rather than assuming.
Is Vaunt workwear any good for everyday trade use, or is it just light duty stuff?
It is aimed at everyday trade use, especially for lads who want straightforward kit without overcomplicating it. It is well suited to regular site wear, van work and maintenance jobs, but as always, the harder the trade and the rougher the ground, the more important it is to choose the right spec for that job.
Will Vaunt hi vis and safety clothing hold up once it is covered in mud and dust?
Yes, provided you clean it properly and do not just leave it in the van. Site mud and dust are part of the job, but once reflective areas, fastenings or the fabric itself are too worn or clogged to do the job properly, it is time to replace it.
Are Vaunt safety boots better than safety trainers for long shifts?
Depends where you work. Boots are usually the better call for rough ground, heavier materials and wetter conditions because they give more support and protection. Trainers suit lighter indoor work and fit out jobs better where you are covering miles but not dealing with the same abuse underfoot.