Showing posts with label lab safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lab safety. Show all posts

Monday, September 22, 2014

WWWTP - Lab Signs Edition

From the Sept 2014 issue of Wired magazine:


I understand that magazines require flashy, highly-posed photographs to move copy.
That said, did no one in the Editor's office notice all the warnings on that hood sash?
They read:

"Wear proper PPE (Goggles, Gloves, Protective Clothing)"
"Always properly label your chemicals, including your initials. Any unknowns will be disposed of as Hazardous Waste"
"NO STORAGE"

As far as I can tell, the researcher pictured is in violation of all three signs. Ye Gods.

Friday, June 20, 2014

Friday Fun: Posters

Two regular readers have sent in chem-themed posters from different ends of the U.S.A.

First, from Lockheed Martin, comes this educational reminder:

Not unless he wears safety gloves, he won't!

Then this advertisement for Harvard Summer school, seen on mass transit:

Psst! We just tell 'em it's a lot easier in the summer...

Happy Friday,
See Arr Oh

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Rock Star PPE

I'm not usually up-to-date on the latest GQ, but something caught my eye as I thumbed through the December issue: Joe Perry, lead guitarist of Aerosmith...in a lab coat.

Apparently, Mr. Perry donates his time to a charity - Rock Stars of Science - sponsored by clothier Geoffrey Beene. Along with other artists, they sponsor cancer research at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. The grantees, naturally labeled "Rock Docs," have received substantial funds via this venture: G.B.'s website claims $126 million since 2006!

Joe Perry tours Sloan-Kettering
(That jewelry begs to get caught in an overhead stirrer)
While the fan in me says "Awesome," the safety-conscious chemist cries out: where's Mr. Perry's PPE? No goggles? No gloves? No hair ties? To risk sounding prudish, bare chests and chemicals don't exactly mix. Sure, it's a posed photo-op, but hey - when a VIP visits a building site or machine shop, they force him into glasses and construction helmets, right?

Well, I suppose it's for a good cause, and if the idea of guitar gods getting involved with basic cancer research gets the general public excited, I'm all for it.

*Update: Apparently CENtral Science blogged this all the way back in 2009.