Fuda accessories in Staten Island are at Quazi Supply, 519 Port Richmond Avenue, 10302. Fuda is the accessories brand on our back wall — the hard-hat winter liners, the tool bags, the knee pads, the back-supports, the lumbar belts, and the dozen smaller items every working person eventually needs. Open 11 to 8, seven days.
Hard-hat winter liners are the SKU we sell most. Fleece-lined cap that fits under a hard hat without compromising the suspension fit, full ear coverage, full neck coverage at the back, and a chin strap that holds it tight in wind. The liner is what separates a productive February shift from a guy sitting in the truck because his ears are cold. We stock black and orange (high-vis), one size with adjustable strap, $12-$18 a piece. Foremen buy them by the dozen for crews working outside in winter.
Tool bags in the Fuda line are the carpenter's bag and the open-top contractor bag. The carpenter's bag is the rigid-bottom bucket-style bag with internal pockets for hammers, tape, drivers, and pencils. Goes in the bed of a truck or stands at the foot of a ladder. The open-top contractor bag is the soft-sided large-capacity haul bag for moving tools between trucks. Both run $25-$45 depending on the size.
Knee pads are the underrated essential. Fuda makes a gel-fill knee pad with a cordura outer, two adjustable straps, and a hard plastic cap on the front. Tile setters, flooring guys, plumbers in the crawl space, and electricians wiring outlets near the floor all wear them. $20-$30 a pair. We sell the gel-fill at three times the volume of the foam-only because the gel actually works.
Back-support belts and lumbar belts are the safety-and-comfort piece. Adjustable hook-and-loop closure, internal stays for lumbar support, suspenders to keep the belt at waist level. Movers, warehouse pickers, plumbers who lift heavy fixtures, and HVAC techs who carry compressors all wear them. $25-$40.
The smaller items are the things you don't realize you need until you need them. Fuda makes the work pencil holders that clip to a tool belt, the tape-measure clips, the hammer holsters, the chalk-line reels. They're at the back wall and the impulse rack at the counter. Most are under $10 and we sell more of them than any other category by unit count.
Where Fuda fits in our shop: it's the brand we keep on the wall for the items that aren't the hero purchase but make the working day work. You're not coming to the shop specifically for a Fuda hard-hat liner the way you might come specifically for a pair of Red Wings. But once you're here for the boots, you walk past the wall, you remember your last winter shift, and you pick up two liners and a knee pad set.
Fit reality: Fuda's adjustable accessories (liners, belts, knee pads) are mostly one-size-fits-most. The tool bags are sized standard (small, medium, large carrier capacity). The knee pad straps adjust to fit most calves; if you have a particularly muscular calf, ask for the extended-strap version.
Trades that reach for Fuda: every trade. The accessories side of the wall is genuinely cross-cutting — the same hard-hat liner is on a roofer in November and on a Con Ed lineman in January. Knee pads are bought by tile setters and plumbers and electricians. Back belts are bought by movers and warehouse guys.
Fleet accounts on Fuda are most useful for the high-turnover items: hard-hat liners (lost), pencils and pencil holders (consumable), and chalk-line refills (consumable). Foremen running a 12-person crew buy a case of liners in October and have spares all winter.
Walk in. 519 Port Richmond Ave. The accessories wall is in the back. Browse for five minutes — every working person finds something they didn't know they were missing.
