Given my sense of the age range in this forum, I assume some of us still go to a library (a brick-and-mortar site where books--bound volumes of text--are loaned). As we are barefooters, we might decide to enter the site barefoot, aware or not that these sites, as public venues, usually (officially) require "shoes," even as minimal as flips. I once visited my local library barefoot, not only to get a book held for me but also to go over to the Fiction section (requiring crossing the open area, meaning my bare feet were plainly visible). I heard not one word. But, being traditional, I've chosen to wear shoes inside, even though my 0.75-mile walk to and from the place has always been barefoot since retirement (once a young woman resting under a shading tree offered "I like your shoes!" I replied, "So do I. A perfect fit every time!") What has been the experiences of you who use a library barefoot? Accepted? Warned? Varied delending on who was "minding the store"? I do not include school-attached libraries as cultures vary from those of public ones.
I never had a problem at the Library being barefoot there were others there that were barefoot with there kid’s.