Gloves
Safety Protection Gloves, Food Processing, Sensitive Environment Handling

ESD Gloves
Cleanroom Gloves
Latex, Nitrile, Rubber, Syntethic, Vinyl
Food Deli Gloves
Warehouse Gloves
Cold Freezer Gloves
Inspectors Gloves
Industrial Food Processing Gloves, Aprons, Arm Sleeves, Safety Glasses, Rubber Boots
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Choosing the Right Hand Protection Glove!
Latex
Natural rubber latex is a processed plant product
Most trusted material and first choice for healthcare settings worldwide
Consistent fit, flexibility, and resilience. Fits the best!
Reliable performance and barrier protection against infection and contamination
Allergic reaction for some users
Costs fluctuate according to prices of natural resources
Vinyl
First synthetic material available to consumer
Composed of polyvinyl chloride and plasticizers that softens the material.
Economical alternative to latex gloves. Cheapest material used for gloves!
Great for basic hand protection in a low infection environment.
Good multi-purpose glove for general use and activities that do not require highest degree of tactile precision.
Allergy Free!
Does not fit as well as latex
Nitrile
Synthetic Polymer that exhibits rubber-like characteristics
Protein and allergy free
Much of the same flexibility, tensile strength, and durability as latex
Superior to latex gloves in providing protection against petroleum-based products.
More expensive to produce than latex.
Neoprene
Synthetic glove made from polychloroprene.
Synthetic that fits and feels more like vinyl.
Reliable performance and superior protection.
High quality latex-free synthetic.
Types of Gloves
General Purpose
Food Handling
Beauty Supply/Hair Salon
Janitorial
Housekeeping
Cleaning/Painting/Yard Work/Plumbing/etc.
Arts and Crafts
Industrial
Auto
Exam
Medical
Dental
Healthcare Related
EMS/First Aid
Law Enforcement
Nursing Home/Homecare
Tattoo and Body Piercing
Pet & Vet
High Risk
EMS
Tattoo Shops
Industrial
Auto
Laboratory
Powder vs. Powder-Free
Donning powders which are used to make gloves easier to pull on and to keep them from sticking together. Can act as a vehicle for the transmission of latex proteins. Typical powders used are cornstarch and oatmeal. Costs more to make powder-free gloves since powders must be removed from the glove.
What is a latex allergy?
An allergy or immediate hypersensitivity reaction occurs when the body’s immune system is sensitized to a foreign protein and reacts by forming a type of antibody called an IgE antibody specifically directed against this protein. This kind of antibody is responsible for a wide variety of allergic responses which may range from hives (urticaria) to allergic rhinitis (hay fever), asthma, or rarely, life-threatening allergic attacks (anaphylaxis).
Latex allergic individuals make allergic antibodies directed against one or more proteins that are found in natural rubber latex. Latex gloves are frequently implicated in allergic reactions due to the repeated direct exposure of the wearer’s hands to latex proteins or due to airborne latex proteins that are absorbed by powders used to lubricate some latex gloves.
String Knit Gloves