Perhaps I should have amended my comments about belts to exclude anyone with a GQ figure (and pretty looks ). I've lost 54.6 lbs since March 8th as of this morning, but it is going to be a loooong time before "no belts" works for me. I suspect though that for most of us who don't have property to work around and spend most of our time at a desk, a belt is de rigueur for avoiding gun-related wardrobe malfunctions.VMI77 wrote:I've carried a Glock 21 in a Blackhawk serpa holster all day, working around my property, no belt, without a problem. Granted, the pants were fairly snug, and there was some slight sagging, but not enough to be a problem.The Annoyed Man wrote:Over 50 or not, the decision to never wear a belt is certainly yours to make, but in so doing you're eliminating by default most methods of carrying your gun on your waist. Your waistband may support a paddle holster for a short time, but eventually it IS going to pull your pants down......unless you get a belt.winters wrote:Is their any holsters that work without wearing a belt? The only time I wear a belt is at work. I refuse to wear one any other time. Seems like the whole belt thing is from my fathers generation.
By the way.... My 25 year old son carries on his waist with a belt, so belts aren't just reserved for your father's generation (of which I am a part). If you don't want to wear one, that's fine, but you asked, and that's the BEST answer. One thing that pretty much all of us have had to do was learn to make adjustments in how we do things when we started carrying. One of those adjustments was learning to dress around the gun, rather than the other way around.
Best of luck.
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Return to “Pocket carry with no holster”
- Fri Jun 19, 2015 2:35 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: Pocket carry with no holster
- Replies: 49
- Views: 14162
Re: Pocket carry with no holster
- Thu Jun 18, 2015 10:36 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: Pocket carry with no holster
- Replies: 49
- Views: 14162
Re: Pocket carry with no holster
Over 50 or not, the decision to never wear a belt is certainly yours to make, but in so doing you're eliminating by default most methods of carrying your gun on your waist. Your waistband may support a paddle holster for a short time, but eventually it IS going to pull your pants down......unless you get a belt.winters wrote:Is their any holsters that work without wearing a belt? The only time I wear a belt is at work. I refuse to wear one any other time. Seems like the whole belt thing is from my fathers generation.
By the way.... My 25 year old son carries on his waist with a belt, so belts aren't just reserved for your father's generation (of which I am a part). If you don't want to wear one, that's fine, but you asked, and that's the BEST answer. One thing that pretty much all of us have had to do was learn to make adjustments in how we do things when we started carrying. One of those adjustments was learning to dress around the gun, rather than the other way around.
Best of luck.
- Tue Jun 16, 2015 9:10 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: Pocket carry with no holster
- Replies: 49
- Views: 14162
Re: Pocket carry with no holster
Welcome to the forum, and thanks for sharing.ArmedAndPolite wrote:With the P22 I feel a holster is unnecessary. What are your thoughts on pocket holsters?
It is ABSOLUTELY a safety issue. Look at it this way....... pocket carry without a holster is no less dangerous than IWB carry without a holster....maybe even more so.
By way of recommendations, I recently received an Alabama Front Pocket Holster for an XDS-45: http://www.alabamaholster.com/product/f ... t-holster/
Here's a couple of pictures of it....
Note a couple of things about it (keeping in mind that this is a left-handed holster):
- The trigger is entirely covered in a hard shell of kydex. Nothing is getting into that trigger except your finger.
- The outward facing surface of the holster breaks up the outlines of the gun so that it looks like a wallet in the pocket. (I'll probably put the OEM magazine floorplate back on for pocket carry.)
- The inward facing surface of the holster has a sort of shelf at the top edge, where the (left-handed) user can push down with his thumb while drawing the gun, to keep the holster in the pocket, so it doesn't come out with the gun. (The right-handed version would be a mirror image of this one.)