Couldn't get one in France for love nor money Pete.I knew that 3M for example made them, but 3M France point blank denied that they did.3M other countries insisted that I go through 3M France.Same was the case with other suppliers .Safety stuff in France was waay behind.French artisans in general are not in the slightest bit safety conscious, there is only one french guy I would consider working with, he like me has degree level science ( he botany, me organic chemistry and some fine art ones ) the number of french carpenters and cabinet makers minus fingers is horrific.Dust masks, spray masks etc exist, hardly any of them wear them, even when they are teaching apprentices and being filmed for TV. Hard hats are ( in the minds of most workers, and their bosses "optional", they have them but don't wear them ) until an accident happens .Likewise gloves, and harnesses when working on a roof, scaffold safety bars idem. I saw again yesterday the typical guy ( on a road repair gang ) using a petrol driven big disc slab cutter, vast clouds of dust, hell of a noise, no mask, no gloves, no ear defenders, no safety gear at all, nor any of his workmates.He was cutting a slab right next to his foot, towards him, between his legs.They had however put a road sign up ( warning they were there ) on the road itself, forcing all vehicles to drive on the wrong side on a blind bend, where the oncoming vehicles , including buses are coming of a roundabout with you in their lane going the wrong way.
Actually, I just remembered, one of my art ones isn't a "fine art" one .Medical and scientific illustration ( well obsolete in the days of software programs , there were not many prospects when I did it way back in the 70s ) "restoration" and life drawing / painting sculpture are in the others. Not that degrees are any guide at all to talent , or safety proceedures.just that the friend who has the botany one ( and who ran several of the Biggest French national parks before he retired at least doesn't have his eyes glaze over when I talk about the damage that dust and chemicals can do )..Even some of the french expert picture restorers are on TV touching centuries old pictures on their surfaces without wearing gloves, yet the prehistoric caves are forbidden to the public ( due to problems with the humidity and acids in breath etc , and so they should be ) but ministers are regularly allowed in and filmed running their ungloved fingers, and breathing directly over cave drawings that are 40K years old.. They know better, but either they can't be donkeyed, or it doesn't apply to them, or "it is just this once won't hurt", "no risk".Same attitude to their own safety or the safety of others, which is why on the road, the french drive down the middle, astride the lines and then if they see something coming the other way, they try and get back on their own side, frequently they don't make it, "head ons" are really really common here.Discovered last weekend that our local gendarmes ( police ) cannot "back up" of them drove down our 6 meter wide lane ( it has only one exit , the way they came in ) and to get back to the main road took them 25 minutes , with much shouting and gesturing and nearly hitting my car and my wood store trying to reverse past them.Private road, so being hit by a police car would have been an insurance nightmare even if they had owned up to it being their fault if they'd damaged anything. me and the neighbours just watched, successfully not laughing til they had eventually gone.