The Jewelry Box Approach to PPE

Words: Greg Brown
Photos: Malta Dynamics

We love our wives.

We work hard to make them proud to be with us. We buy the anniversary ring. The earrings. The necklace. Maybe even the oversized purse that somehow holds snacks for the kids and still has room for that gigantic Stanley cup. We don’t buy those things because we have to. We buy them because they say something: I value you. I notice you. I’m proud of you.

And if we’re honest, we enjoy seeing them wear those gifts. Take care of them. Display them. There’s something satisfying about knowing we chose something thoughtful.
Now think about your best mason.

The one who shows up early. Keeps the line straight. Carries block in August heat without complaint. Trains the new guy. Makes you money every single day.
Doesn’t he deserve to feel “pretty”? How about pretty… safe?

Humor aside, most masonry contractors genuinely care about their crews. This trade is too demanding not to. Masonry can beat up hands, shoulders, knees, lungs, and hearing over time. It’s not a soft profession. It requires toughness and pride.

But sometimes the way we purchase personal protective equipment tells a different story than the one we intend.

 

Too often PPE decisions are made on autopilot: buy in bulk, grab what’s cheap, stick with what we’ve always used. If it passes inspection, it passes. That’s compliance thinking. It checks the box.

The jewelry box approach is different. It asks a simple question: If this person is essential to my business, why wouldn’t I invest in the gear that protects him comfortably and reliably every single day?

Quality protective equipment doesn’t just reduce risk; it communicates value. When gear fits better, performs better, and feels intentional rather than disposable, workers tend to treat it differently. They wear it more consistently. They maintain it. They take pride in it. Subtle signals matter on a job site.

And here’s the part we don’t talk about enough: respect drives retention. In an industry fighting for skilled labor, small daily decisions compound. The condition of the jobsite. The quality of the equipment. The standard you set for protection. All of it tells your crew what they’re worth.

This isn’t about making masonry soft. It’s about making it sustainable.

 

The best contractors understand that safety isn’t just a regulatory requirement, it’s a reflection of leadership. It shows whether you see your crew as a cost line or as craftsmen whose skill and experience build your reputation.

We buy jewelry to celebrate the people we love and value.

Maybe it’s time we think about PPE the same way, not as an expense to minimize, but as a statement to the men and women who build our projects:

You matter here.
We’re proud you wear our name.
And we’re going to protect you accordingly.


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