 Why you might want to wear a carpenter's apron? Well uh, woodworkers, Paul Carlson here, a small workshop guy. When I'm going to do joinery and moving around the shop and I want to mark off things, I kind of want to have everything with me. I don't want to be looking for where is it. I have for a couple of months tried this carpenter's apron. This was under $30 and is really, really working well for me. Let me show you how I use it. I've got three pockets up here, so I have my marking devices in two of these smaller pockets. Then I have on some loops that are on the side of the apron. I have attached a holster. This is from Sterrett. It's designed to hold their calipers. I spent so much on the holster that I couldn't afford the Sterrett calipers, and I like these Husky calipers anyway because they are in inches, both as fractions and as decimal and in millimeters, and you can switch back and forth during a measurement just using the mode button. So those are my favorite calipers. I have my measuring tape obviously. I use the FastCap old standby. This is one for laying flat on workpieces. So anyway, the beauty of that is it's got a pencil sharpener in it, but I don't need that because I use mechanical pencils. I got two rows of pockets here of various sizes. I keep my combination square right there where I need it in one pocket. I load up this bottom pocket with my feeler gauge and with my wax, and again, put whatever you want to in your pockets. I have my scribing knife or my ... Now to keep that point from tearing through the bottom of the pocket, which I have found to be a problem because that's very sharp, I take a piece of cardboard about two inches by three inches, fold it in half, put it in the bottom of that pocket, and then I'm not having any problem. What else do I have? Well, my safety glasses are right there where I need them. I have some files of a couple different types and my dual marking gauge from Veritas. So this apron I got on Amazon. It was under $30. It's by Wurta, W-I-R-T-A. It's called Wurta Work Small Workshop Guy. I hope you find that helpful, signing off.