![]() While I wore them hiking, these gloves would suit a variety of outdoor purposes. The touchscreen fingertips are highly responsive, and the stretchy cuffs prevent cold wrists. Perfect for backcountry hikes, they’re thin enough to provide ample dexterity when fishing items out of a backpack or taking photos of scenic vistas yet thick enough to insulate against frosty mornings or random rainstorms. I purchased these gloves for the five-day W Trek in Patagonia’s Torres Del Paine National Park. Material: Nylon and leather | Smartphone compatibility: Five fingers, palm grip | Price: $$ The polar fleece, meanwhile, is soft and flexible, making these gloves just as great for daily wear in the colder months. Deerskin has great grip and durability, and it doesn’t harden in the cold, so you can wear these for everything from riding a motorcycle to shoveling the driveway. ![]() The gloves’ exterior is made with a grippy deerskin-suede palm and a fluffy polar-fleece top, both of which add warmth and utility. They’re lined with a patented Heatlok thermal layer that can withstand temperatures of down to -20 degrees Fahrenheit (though the company notes that’s the extreme temperature for the gloves, and 0 degrees Fahrenheit is the comfortable temperature). ![]() These unisex gloves from OZero are first and foremost warm, which is likely why almost 7,000 readers have purchased them since 2019, making them our most-purchased gloves. ![]() So when we went in search of the very best gloves, we focused on function over form. Material: Fleece | Smartphone compatibility: None | Price: $Ī glove is no good if it doesn’t do the main thing it’s made to do: keep your fingers warm. ![]()
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