Cotton
Moisture builds within minutes in sealed equipment. It stays. Skin breaks down.
"I can't get my gloves on"
"my hands literally drip sweat"
"I can't finish my shift"
"my skin cracks and bleeds"
Cotton
Bamboo
Polyester
nylon
merino
Moisture saturates inside sealed equipment. The fabric absorbs — then holds it against skin. Skin has nowhere to breathe.
The barrier softens. Bacteria move through. This is called occlusion. It happens regardless of the material — cotton, nylon, silk, or none.
Weekend recovery. Monday relapse.
No glove, liner, or cream stops this — because none of them route the moisture out.
Absorb moisture — then hold it against the skin. Inside a sealed glove, a wet cloth pressed against damaged skin.
Feel better initially. Saturate faster. By midday, the same wet-layer effect.
Add moisture to skin that's already overhydrated. Inside a sealed glove, it has nowhere to go.
Nitrile, latex, vinyl, rubber — they all occlude. Switching changes the feel. Not the physics.
Standard advice. Assumes moisture can evaporate. Inside a sealed glove, it can't.
Reduces one irritant. The core environment — sealed, occluded, compressed — remains unchanged.
center 15%
"Everyone on the team uses a hair dryer between periods — except me, I use liners now. Played one practice without them. Not doing that again."
Read Linnea's case →
center 15%
"I'd never thought to put something between the glove and his skin. Two weeks later, his hands were completely clear. I couldn't believe it."
Read the case →
center 15%
"I'd never even heard of a glove liner before. Honestly, my hands are back to normal. These liners gave my hands a chance."
Read Jens' case →One tries to absorb moisture. One moves it. Under compression inside a sealed glove, only one of those approaches still works.
The gradient functions regardless of external pressure. Compression does not collapse the transport mechanism.
Transport is continuous. There is no maximum capacity after which function stops. Cotton has one. DRYE does not.
Performance comes from material architecture. No membranes, coatings, or additives that degrade over time.
The outer glove didn't change. The cream didn't change. What changed was what happened between skin and glove.
"Some creams did nothing. My hands got worse every shift. Open wounds. I dealt with the damage for months."
"My hands are honestly normal now. Without a doubt, those liners gave my hands a real chance."
"Redness and cracking after every practice. Cotton liners helped briefly — then the same cycle returned."
"My grip was better, my hands stayed drier, and my skin started doing better. Now it feels weird not to wear them."
Managing moisture inside a sealed glove isn't an absorption problem. It's a occlusion problem. DRYE is engineered to move moisture away from the skin even when the fabric is compressed — the only condition that actually matters.
Try them. 30 days. Full refund if they don't work.
Works under any sealed glove. Machine wash. Lasts 4–12 months.
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.