Hi Vis Safety Jacket - Waterproof, 360° Reflective, ANSI
Field Notes on the Modern Hi Vis Safety Jacket (and Why Summer Shirts Are Winning)
I’ve spent enough early mornings on construction sites to know one thing: visibility isn’t optional. It’s survival. Lately, the shift is toward lighter, breathable gear—because heat stress is real—and that’s where QS Clothing’s Hv Safety Summer Shirt comes in. It’s technically a long-sleeve polo, yes, but in day-to-day ops it often replaces a heavier Hi Vis Safety Jacket for warm-weather crews. To be honest, crews love anything that breathes and still ticks the compliance box.
What’s trending (and actually useful)
- Heat-smart visibility: lighter knits, vented panels, and segmented reflective tape to avoid “sauna suit” effect.
- Sustainability: recycled polyester blends are now mainstream, not niche.
- Real compliance: ANSI/ISEA 107 and EN ISO 20471 labeling that safety managers can audit in seconds.
Product snapshot: Hv Safety Summer Shirt
Origin: Floor 15, Fortune Building, 24 Guangan Street, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, China. Fabric is a breathable 55% recycled polyester / 45% cotton knit—surprisingly soft, with enough structure to hold reflective trim without sag.
| Spec | Details |
|---|---|
| Fabric | 55% polyester (recycled) / 45% cotton, pique knit ≈180–200 g/m² |
| Colors | Any color per customer demand; hi-vis lime/orange popular |
| Sizes | S–4XL or customized size |
| Tape Options | Segmented or solid reflective; Class 2/3 configurations (project-dependent) |
| UPF | UPF 40+ to 50+ (real-world use may vary by color and finish) |
| Service Life | ≈25–50 industrial wash cycles before reflectivity/color fade thresholds |
Process flow (short version, shop-floor reality)
- Materials: recycled PET yarn + combed cotton; OEKO-TEX Standard 100-dyed yarns where specified.
- Knitting & finishing: pique knit, moisture-wicking finish; colorfastness ISO 105 ≈ grade 4–5.
- Patterning & sewing: reinforced shoulder seams; cover-stitch at high-movement zones.
- Trims: reflective tape (ANSI/ISEA 107 and/or EN ISO 20471 compliant); heat-transfer logos optional.
- Testing: luminance/retroreflectivity per ANSI/ISEA 107; dimensional stability ISO 5077; tensile ASTM D5034.
- Packing & QC: AQL 2.5 typical; serialized cartons for traceability.
Sample test data (M size, lime, segmented tape): retroreflective R’ ≈ 330 cd/lx·m² new; after 25 washes ≈ 250 cd/lx·m² (still within spec). That’s the kind of thing safety managers ask me for, constantly.
Where it’s used (and why crews stick with it)
- Roadwork and traffic control: replaces a heavy Hi Vis Safety Jacket in summer to cut heat stress.
- Utilities, rail, logistics yards: all-day wear without “reflective rash,” as one supervisor joked.
- Warehouse and last-mile: good visibility under mixed lighting.
Vendor landscape (my honest cheat sheet)
| Vendor | Highlights | Certifications | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| QS Clothing | Custom colors/sizes, recycled blends, fast sampling | ANSI/ISEA 107, EN ISO 20471 (per style), OEKO-TEX options | Strong on private label |
| Brand X (EU) | Premium tapes, broader SKU library | EN ISO 20471, ISO 13688 | Higher MOQs/costs |
| Local Importer | Immediate stock | Varies; check lot certificates | Specs can be inconsistent |
Customization that matters
Logos (heat transfer or embroidery), tape layout for Type R Class 2/3 visibility, pocket mapping for scanners/radios, and colorways to match corporate identity. Many customers say they want “one shirt for everything,” but in practice two SKUs (Class 2 day; Class 3 night/roadside) cover 90% of risk profiles.
Quick case notes
- Municipal road crew (Southwest US): swapped summer Hi Vis Safety Jacket usage for Hv Safety Summer Shirt; reported fewer heat-related complaints and better wear rates over 4 months.
- Ports/logistics client: added segmented tape and radio loop; supervisors liked the cleaner silhouette—less snag risk on containers.
Compliance note: Specify ANSI/ISEA 107-2020 Type and Class (R or P; 2 or 3) and EN ISO 20471 class at purchase. Always verify test certificates per lot; real-world reflectivity can drift with wash chemistry.
Authoritative references
- ANSI/ISEA 107-2020 High-Visibility Safety Apparel and Accessories. https://safetyequipment.org/standard/ansi-isea-107/
- EN ISO 20471:2013+A1:2016 High visibility clothing. https://www.iso.org/standard/64762.html
- ISO 13688:2013 Protective clothing — General requirements. https://www.iso.org/standard/58031.html
- OEKO-TEX Standard 100. https://www.oeko-tex.com/en/our-standards/oeko-tex-standard-100
- FHWA MUTCD Guidance on Worker Visibility. https://mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov/










