Band-Aid Flexible Fabric Adhesive Bandages
Editor's take: our full writeup rates this bandage 4.7/5 in the Band-Aid Flexible Fabric bandages review β read it for the full case, or compare every wound-care pick in our which first aid kit do you need pillar ...
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Band-Aid Flexible Fabric Adhesive Bandages β the everyday work strip
If you're stocking a kit or cabinet for hands that grip, lift, and sweat all day, the Band-Aid Flexible Fabric Adhesive Bandages are the strip to order first. The woven fabric backing flexes with knuckles and palms instead of creasing and lifting like plastic film, and the adhesive holds through a full shift of glove changes and handwashing. This page covers what you're buying, how it stacks up against the other fabric strips in the bandages and wound care collection, and what to order alongside it.
Jump to: Features Β· Specs Β· Restocking Β· Comparison Β· FAQ
Band-Aid Flexible Fabric Adhesive Bandages are sterile, individually wrapped fabric strips (vendor model 381370044444) built for cuts and scrapes on hands and joints that stay in motion β the standard restock item for shops, offices, and toolbox kits.
Key features
- Woven fabric backing stretches with knuckles and palms instead of creasing like plastic strips
- Adhesive bonds through sweat, handwashing, and glove changes for a full shift
- Breathable weave keeps skin drier under the strip than film-backed bandages
- Sterile, individually wrapped strips satisfy ANSI Z308.1 bandage fill requirements
- Recognized brand name simplifies employee acceptance and reorder decisions
- Fits every kit tier β from a toolbox pouch to a wall-mounted cabinet
Pros
- Flexes with working hands instead of creasing loose
- Adhesion that outlasts plastic strips through sweat and washing
- Breathable β reduces the soggy-fingertip effect that lifts weaker strips
- The recognized brand default; nobody questions it in the kit
- Sterile individually wrapped strips, ready for any kit tier
Cons
- Priced above bulk fabric boxes like the Dynarex 3611
- Not metal-detectable β wrong pick for food-processing lines
- Tan fabric shows shop grime faster than a bright colorway
- Strip format tops out fast; bigger wounds need a pad or dressing
Specifications
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Vendor | Band-Aid |
| Model | 381370044444 |
| Format | Woven fabric adhesive strip, sterile, individually wrapped |
| Backing | Flexible fabric (not plastic film) |
| Typical use | Minor cuts and scrapes on hands, fingers, and joints |
| List price | $8.97 |
Use cases
- Shop and trade crews restocking a truck box or wall pocket in a first aid cabinets collection station β the fabric strip survives glove changes better than plastic.
- Office and facility managers filling a compliant workplace first aid kits program where employees recognize and trust the brand.
- Household and vehicle kits that need one dependable strip for everyday cuts without a second-guess purchase.
- Safety coordinators auditing bandage stock before it runs out β see our best workplace first aid kits guide for how fast this slot empties.
Restocking: what to order alongside these bandages
Adhesive strips are the highest-turnover item in almost any first aid kits program, which means the Band-Aid Flexible Fabric box rarely ships alone. If you're refilling a wall unit, pair it with a structured pack from the first aid kit refills collection. For higher-volume facilities, step up to a full first aid cabinets restock so the whole shelf gets refreshed at once, not just the bandage pocket.
What this bandage is not: it is not a substitute for a bordered dressing on larger wounds, and it is not metal-detectable for food-service use. For those needs, see the sibling products below.
| Restock item | Why pair it | Buy link |
|---|---|---|
| First Aid Only 90583 refill | Restores a 25-person kit's full ANSI fill | View kit refill |
| Urgent First Aid Class A refill | 78-piece Class A restock for cabinets and kits | View refill kit |
| Medique 712MTM cabinet | Classic 3-shelf cabinet with a dedicated bandage pocket | View cabinet |
| Healqu island dressing 4x4 | For wounds that outgrow any strip | View dressing |
| Curad Blue Detectable knuckle bandages | Required in food-processing and kitchen environments | View bandages |
Bulk buyers restocking multiple stations can also cross-shop the entire first aid cabinets and stations line for wall-mount units that hold a full bandage supply, or the first aid kit refills for bulk restocking to top off several kits in one order.
Comparison: Band-Aid Flexible Fabric vs the other fabric strips
The Band-Aid Flexible Fabric strip is the branded default; the two closest fabric-strip siblings solve different problems.
| Product | Backing | Best for | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Band-Aid Flexible Fabric | Woven fabric | Everyday default, brand recognition | $8.97 |
| Dynarex 3611 | Woven fabric | Bulk-box cabinet restocking | $5.32 |
| Curad Performance Series | Woven fabric, extreme-hold adhesive | Sweat, water, and glove changes | $8.47 |
- Choose the Band-Aid Flexible Fabric if you want the recognized default that employees trust and reorder without a second thought.
- Choose the Dynarex 3611 sterile fabric bandages if cost per strip drives a scheduled cabinet restock β see our Dynarex 3611 fabric bandages review.
- Choose the Curad Performance Series antibacterial bandages if wet-work adhesion is the deciding factor.
- Need a knuckle-cut shape instead? The Dynarex 3614 knuckle fabric bandages wrap joints more securely than a straight strip.
Our full Band-Aid Flexible Fabric bandages review walks through the fabric-versus-plastic tradeoff in more depth, and the which first aid kit do you need buyer's guide and best workplace first aid kits guide cover the containers this bandage stocks.
Compare fabric strips on Amazon β Band-Aid Flexible Fabric Dynarex 3611
Frequently asked questions
What size box should I order for a workplace kit?
Order enough boxes to match your kit's ANSI class and headcount β Class A and Class B fills each specify a minimum bandage count, decoded in our OSHA first aid kit requirements reference. If you're not sure which class applies, start with the which first aid kit do you need pillar guide.
Is this the right bandage for a first-time kit build, or a restock?
Both. It's sold as a standalone box for restocking an existing first aid kits program, and it's also the strip most safety coordinators default to when assembling a new kit from scratch.
Should I buy this or the Dynarex 3611 for a large facility?
If you're restocking multiple stations on a schedule, the Dynarex 3611 bulk fabric bandages cost less per strip. If you want the brand employees already trust in a visible kit, order the Band-Aid box.
Does this bandage satisfy ANSI Z308.1 fill requirements?
Yes β sterile individually wrapped fabric strips count toward the adhesive bandage line item in ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 Class A and Class B kits. Full quantities are in our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference.
Can I use this in a food-service or commercial kitchen kit?
Not where detectability rules apply. Order the Curad Blue Detectable knuckle bandages instead for food-processing and kitchen lines.
What ships with this product?
A box of sterile, individually wrapped Band-Aid Flexible Fabric strips under vendor model 381370044444. No cabinet, kit, or additional wound-care items are included β order those separately from the first aid cabinets collection or first aid kit refills collection.
How do I know when to reorder?
Bandages are typically the fastest-emptying slot in any kit or cabinet. Safety coordinators managing a workplace first aid kits program should check the bandage pocket on a monthly cadence rather than waiting for a full annual restock.
Is this bandage waterproof?
The fabric weave is designed to breathe and hold adhesion through sweat and handwashing, not for full water submersion. For wet or outdoor-heavy use, check the fill lists inside our outdoor first aid kits collection.
What's the difference between this and the Curad Performance Series?
Both are fabric strips, but the Curad Performance Series Extreme Hold bandages use a stronger adhesive formulated specifically for repeated water exposure and glove changes. Order Curad if your crew works wet; order Band-Aid for general shop and office use.
Do I need a different bandage for finger joints and knuckles?
A straight strip works for most cuts, but for wounds directly on a knuckle crease, the Dynarex 3614 knuckle fabric bandages are cut to wrap the joint without bunching.
Can I buy this alongside a full first aid cabinet order?
Yes β many facility orders combine a cabinet from the first aid cabinets and stations line with several boxes of bandages to fully stock the new unit on day one.
Is there a bulk-pricing option for large facilities?
WC Safety lists this as a single box; for volume restocking across several cabinets, combine multiple boxes with a bulk refill pack from the first aid kit refills collection to cut down on separate orders.
What should I check before ordering this bandage for my kit?
Confirm your kit's ANSI class (A or B) and whether your workplace requires detectable bandages. If either answer is unclear, the which first aid kit do you need buyer's guide walks through both decisions before you order.
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Last updated: Β· Sources reviewed: ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021, OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, Band-Aid brand product listing, WC Safety wound care category data.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Specifications are taken from the manufacturer's published listing β nothing is invented.
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