“The glove keeps the fish out. It doesn’t keep your hand dry.”
Salmon processing worker
0.4mm thin. Worn inside your rubber glove. Wet skin loses heat 25× faster — Asymmetric Layering keeps the skin side dry.
“The glove keeps the fish out. It doesn’t keep your hand dry.”
Salmon processing worker
“Cotton inserts help for the first hour. Then they’re soaked.”
White fish processing
“The more I sweat inside the gloves, the colder my hands get.”
Commercial deckhand
“Cold outside. Wet inside. That’s the shift.”
King crab fisherman, Finnmark
“After harvest season, your hands are wrecked. Everyone just treats it as normal.”
Salmon farm worker
Sealed glove → trapped sweat → softened skin → fish proteins get through.
In a sealed glove: relative humidity hits 90% within 5–7 minutes. Skin temperature climbs to 95°F
After 27 minutes: skin damage risk doubles in women, 55 minutes in men. Most shifts run 3-6 hours - 8x the threshold.
After 4 hours: your outer skin barrier swells 3x thicker. fish proteins, bacteria and processing chemicals soak in deeper - into skin that can't fight back.
fish processing workers in northern Norway had skin symptoms — vs 27.5% in administrative roles in the same plants.
Every glove, liner, barrier cream and powder fails on the physics.
The skin side repels. The outer side pulls. Sweat exits — it doesn't pool. We call it Asymmetric Layering.
See how it worksMore rubber outside.
Same sweat inside.
Absorbs at first.
Then becomes the wet layer.
New pair, same sealed environment.
Same sweat in 20 minutes.
Help after the shift.
Do not change the shift.
Pull them off mid-shift.
Same wet glove goes back on.
Sweat has nowhere to go.
DRYE does not replace your glove. It changes what your hand sits against inside it.
Sweat routes away from the skin side instead of sitting directly against your hand.
Nitrile goes on and off over the layer — not over wet skin. No ripping.
0.4mm thin. Built to sit under nitrile, latex, rubber and HV gloves.
The outer glove still does the gripping. DRYE changes the wet contact underneath.
The performance comes from the structure, not a chemical finish.
Washable, reusable, and made to keep working through repeated wear.
"Did not appear to affect fingertip sensitivity in electric safety gloves. Raised comfort and reduced the need to air the hand."
"Cotton gloves don't hold up at all. Instantly disgusting, worn out, filthy. Just a temporary barrier. Your liners actually make a difference — and I've got my own hands to prove it."
"Bright pink and raw, skin peeling off. Two weeks later — completely healed."
"Every hour I change my gloves and notice the sweat on my DRYE — but my hands remain dried. Seven pairs to rotate."
“I take gloves on and off 9 times an hour. After two weeks with the lining gloves, my hands felt less itchy, less dry, and less rough.”
"The slim thickness gives great dexterity. They do a great job keeping sweat off my hands."
“My hands get so itchy I can’t work without a layer between my skin and the glove. The lining gloves stay drier than cotton — I’ve been using them continuously.”
Every fibre that's ever been inside your glove fills up with sweat. Then it stops moving. The rest of the shift, it sits against your hand.
Soaks like a sponge. Stays heavy.
Soft-sell marketing. Wetter than cotton.
Soaks slow. Dries slower.
Wet in under an hour.
Wets fast. Dries slow.
Can't fill. Stays dry — full shift.
Moisture regain references: Kadolph 2014 · ASTM D2654 · CN GB national standard. Transport mechanism independently verified at the Swedish School of Textiles, 2025.
Cotton, silk, merino, polyester wicking. All fill with moisture until saturated - then hold it against your skin for the rest of the shift.
Two fibers, one fabric. The skin side repels moisture. The outer side pulls it away. That’s the difference: sweat moves out instead of pooling against the skin.
The longer you wear them, the more permeable your skin becomes.
Moisture moves out continuously. Skin side stays dry.
Moisture is the trigger. Remove it and the condition changes fast. Most users feel the difference during the first shift.
30 days. Full refund if your gloves still feel the same. No forms. No questions.
"After 6 hours under rubber gloves, my hands felt wet inside. Took the gloves off — completely dry. Such a mindfuck."
Seven years of R&D across five independent research institutions.
EV technicians and automotive mechanics reported the same pattern: less trapped sweat, fewer flare-ups, and no loss of dexterity.
Less sticking, less glove flipping, less wet-skin drag. DRYE moves sweat away from your hand so nitrile slides better through the shift.
If the physics don't change your shift — full refund. No forms. No conditions.
Wrist crease to tip of middle finger
Around the hand, just below the knuckles
| Size | Length | Circumference |
|---|
Between sizes? The liner is thin and stretchable. Hand circumference is typically the best guide for a comfortable fit — size up if unsure.