Ironclad FUG Framer's Glove
![]() | Average Customer Rating: Recommend If you want the protection of a glove and want superior dexterity, but also need to use your bare fingers to touch and feel, then this glove does it all. The Framer gives you all the benefits of the Heavy Utility but less the finger tips of the thumb & forefinger Product details and pricing info |
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23 Customer Reviews Posted
- Great gloves for construction trade
- My husband builds decks and finds these gloves to be absolutely wonderful. Having the fingertips exposed helps him grasp tools, and having the rest of his fingers protected, ensures his hands aren't damaged. These gloves are just great!
- 2008-05-11, 0 of 0 people found this review helpful, Rated:
- Exceptional glove
- The Framer's Glove does everything a glove should do. It protects your hands, allows for remarkable flexability, does not shrink after getting wet, is easy to clean, grips tools well, will fit in a pocket, and breathe enough to keep your hands from getting wet from sweat. I just recieved my third pair, have given them as gifts, and have not yet seen a better glove for carpentry work. If I knew of a better glove, I would buy it. The palm is very abrasion resistant and the glove has held up well over time. My first pair eventually came apart at the thumb seam, but the last pair continue to hold up after several seasons, rain, paint, sandpaper use, and heavy box hauling.
- 2007-01-11, 0 of 0 people found this review helpful, Rated:
- GLOVES
- IRONCLAD ? WHAT ELSE DO YOU NEED TO SAY .... THE ONLY GLOVES MY MEN WILL WEAR.
- 2007-01-03, 0 of 0 people found this review helpful, Rated:
- Fit and finish are great!
- I've used a pair of these for the past year with great satisfaction. They fit much better than various leather/fabric gloves from tool stores. Most gloves I've used are in the $12-$17 dollar range, don't fit well, and I need to cut the finger tips off so I can grab screws and small objects. These gloves wore out very slowly and are now shredded (but still usable), so I've now bought my second pair. At $23-ish dollars they seem expensive, but I think I'm getting what I'm paying for. We install commercial doors and hardware, so we use power tools and door hardware. I'm sure that if someone is working with raw lumber, or very abrasive items, that the gloves may not hold up as long as they have for me, plus, I'm not in the field every single day, I estimate they would have lasted almost 6 months with professional, 8 hour a day usage in our field of work. I can't imagine what to do to make them better, if they are more rugged, they won't be flexible enough to do fine finish work...there is always a trade-off. No complaints here.
- 2006-03-26, 1 of 1 people found this review helpful, Rated:
- don't be fooled, these gloves suck!
- after three weeks of purchase, wearing them for only 3 1/2 days of continuous use, the stiching started to come apart. these gloves are a complete waste of money. i normally buy the blue vinyl gloves and they last 4-6 months of continuous use, unless i abuse them or use in a circumstance i know will tear them. but better the gloves than the hand. with the blue vinyl gloves, i can pick up a washer on a concrete slab. i've also bought leather gloves for 11.00 and cut off the fingers i use most often, just like the ironclad gloves offer. leather feels better than the ironclad. these gloves are just a gimic-gadget, not a quality, durable product, at least that has been my personal experience.
- 2004-09-20, 3 of 5 people found this review helpful, Rated:

