Another example of steel hats worn by women who those who spent time outside in traditional male employment such as taxi, ambulance, and bus drivers. The hats protected the women from flying debris from bombs. Women not required to wear hats wore scarves to hold their hair back. Working with equipment and tools such as drills was dangerous, but loose hair made it more so. It became fashionable to wear colorful and cheerful scarves and might have been a woman’s only concession to fashion for example, if she wore coverall In the United States, women called Rosie’s, that worked making airplanes wore red scarves with white bombs. In a painting of Rosie the Riveter by J. Howard Miller, shows a Rosie wearing such a scarf, but does not reveal in detail the bomb but looks only as polka dots. Not all Rosie’s were Riveters, and many different types of Rosies worked all across the United States: single girls, wives, mothers, and widows. Some worked in factories, and other worked in offices. Although Rosie’s were always depicted as white in the posters and advertisements, the women were Native American, Asian, African American and of every race in the United States. What the Rosie’s mostly had in common was they were mostly poor or middle