Custom Fishing Gloves. Grip, Sun and Cut Protection, Built for Every Hold on the Water.
Gloves for the hands that do the work — a wet-grip palm that holds a thrashing fish and a wet line, UPF back-of-hand panels that take the all-day sun, and reinforced, cut-resistant builds for handling leader, blade and fin. Branded for your line or your crew, in half-finger and full-finger cuts.
Custom fishing gloves, organized by the hold they're built for.
Not one all-purpose glove — a set of builds, each engineered for a different moment a hand does the work: shielding it from sun, saving it on the cast, backing it up in a fight, and protecting it at the fillet table. Pick the types your anglers actually use, order them together, and reorder against a locked spec so a repeat matches the pairs already in the field. Every type runs on the same grip and decoration platform.
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Sun-Protection Gloves
All day exposed in the sun — the back of the hand bakes and the line still has to be felt.
Sun-Protection Gloves
- The hold
- Long light-tackle and fly days where the back of the hand bakes hour after hour.
- Key build
- Fingerless or exposed-fingertip, UPF back-of-hand panel, thin quick-dry stretch body.
- Best for
- Flats, fly and inshore anglers who fish exposed all day. See UPF apparel.
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Casting Gloves
The cast and the line, all day — braid and leader saw across fingers and palm.
Casting Gloves
- The hold
- The cast-and-strip, where braid and leader saw the same points all day.
- Key build
- Reinforced index-finger and palm wear zones, a stripping guard, close dexterity fit.
- Best for
- Casters and fly anglers who feel line burn by mid-morning.
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Fighting Gloves
The fish-on fight, under load — rod butt and drag drive line into palm and knuckles.
Fighting Gloves
- The hold
- The fish-on fight, drag pressure driving line and reel handle into the hand.
- Key build
- Padded palm and knuckle backing, full-finger option, a grip palm that won't slip under a wet load.
- Best for
- Offshore, big-game and heavy-tackle roles working real drag.
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Fillet & Grip Gloves
The fish and the blade in hand — fins, gills, teeth and a knife are all at the hand.
Fillet & Grip Gloves
- The hold
- Landing, leadering and cleaning, where fins, gills, teeth and a knife meet the hand.
- Key build
- Cut- and puncture-resistant palm, high wet-grip surface, easy-rinse body.
- Best for
- Mates, guides and processing crews who handle and clean the catch.
Pick the types your anglers actually use and order the set together — one grip and decoration platform runs across all four, so a mixed line still reads as one brand.
Cast at first light, a fish on by ten, a leader in hand at noon, a fillet knife at dusk — one pair of hands, four very different holds, and a glove engineered for each grip.
Build a Glove for Every HoldThe back-of-hand panel that keeps a fishing glove cool and covered.
A fishing glove fails the angler on the back of the hand first — a plain glove either bakes and sweats or blocks the sun by being too thick to fish in. These are the back-panel properties that keep a hand covered without killing feel, each with the reason it holds up over a long day. (Factory-stated specs; confirmed per order on the sample.)
| Back-panel property | Spec / mechanism |
|---|---|
| 4-way stretch back | ~200–230 gsm poly/spandex knit.Moves with the knuckles so the glove flexes on every grip instead of bunching — light enough to feel the line, structured enough to hold a printed panel and a cut sleeve. |
| UPF 50+ on the back of the hand | Knit density + dyed-in treatment, tested to AATCC 183.The top of the hand — the part exposed all day on a fingerless glove — stays covered instead of burning, and the rating survives repeated saltwater rinse. |
| Moisture-wicking + quick-dry | Capillary finish on the back panel.Pulls sweat and spray off the skin and flashes the panel dry, so a glove soaked on a morning run isn't a wet, clammy layer for the rest of the day. |
| Saltwater- and rinse-friendly | Salt- and UV-stable yarns and dye.The glove doesn't go stiff, chalky or faded after a season of getting wet, dried and worn again. |
The back panel handles sun and sweat; how the glove actually grips and survives the wear is built into the palm — see the next section.
The palm, fingers and cuff that make a fishing glove actually hold.
What separates a fishing glove from a garden glove is the palm and the way it's built. A fish is wet and fighting to get away, a line is under load, a fillet knife is inches from the hand — the grip and the reinforcement have to answer all three. Open each zone to see what we build in and why. (Factory-stated construction; representative protection targets.)
A silicone grip-print or a synthetic-suede (Amara) palm gives a high-friction surface that holds a wet, thrashing fish and a loaded line — the wet coefficient is what stops a fish sliding out of the hand, and it's the single property a fishing glove lives or dies on.
The index finger, thumb and fingertips get a reinforced overlay and a stripping guard, so the braid and leader that saw across the same three points all day don't burn through the glove or the skin under it.
For landing and fillet work, the palm runs a cut- and puncture-resistant layer (held to a representative EN 388-style cut target), so fins, gill plates, teeth and a blade meet a protected palm, not bare skin.
A neoprene cuff with a hook-and-loop closure locks the glove to the wrist so it doesn't twist on a grip or wash off in a fight, and still pulls on and off wet with one hand between fish.
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Grip is the first job
The wet coefficient of the palm — not the branding — is what a fishing glove is judged on. Every build starts from a palm that holds a wet fish and a loaded line.
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Reinforced where the line saws
Index finger, thumb and fingertip overlays sit exactly where braid and leader wear a glove out first, so the build lasts a season instead of a few trips.
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Cut protection for the blade end
A cut- and puncture-resistant palm layer stands between the hand and the fins, teeth and knife of landing and fillet work.
The result is a glove that grips when it's wet, protects when it's sharp and stays put under load — season after season.
Your logo on the palm, the cuff and the pack — decorated in-house.
A glove line only reads as a brand if the mark lands the same way every time — the same logo, in the same place, on pair one and pair five hundred. Every decoration and packaging step runs under our own roof, so a branded glove program stays consistent across the run and every reorder.
Logo molded into the grip
Your mark can be part of the silicone grip-print on the palm or heat-transferred on the back panel — branding built into the grip surface itself, not a sticker that peels after a few washes.
Woven cuff label and colorway
A woven brand label on the neoprene cuff plus your color program across the line, held on file so every glove type in the range shares one look on the peg.
One consistent mark across the range
We build your logo onto every glove in the range to the same placement and color, so a brand's line reads as one family on the peg — not a mismatched set of sourced pairs.
Retail-ready packaging
Header cards, hangtags, polybags or boxed sets branded to your line and barcoded to your SKUs — a turnkey private label program if you're starting a range from scratch.
Half-finger and full-finger, Men's and Women's, in a full size run.
Anglers' hands aren't one size or one style. Every glove type in the program comes in fingerless and full-finger builds and in Men's and Women's cuts across a full size run — so a brand's range or a crew's kit fits real hands, and you mix builds and sizes to hit the minimum.
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Fingerless and full-finger, same platform
Every type is offered in an exposed-fingertip build for feel and a full-finger build for coverage, graded off the same pattern so a mixed order still reads as one line.
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A full size run, Men's and Women's
Sizes across S–XXL in Men's and Women's hand shapes, so the range fits a lodge's guests, a crew's hands or a brand's customers without falling off the small and large ends.
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Mix to the minimum — from 100 pairs per style
Spread one style's 100 pairs across fingerless/full-finger and the full size run, so a first order for a real range is a proper assortment, not 100 of one size.
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Reorder that matches, and read the exact sizes
Your pattern, grading and decoration are logged to your style so a repeat matches the pairs already out there — and full hand-measurement tables live on the size charts page, so you order the right grade before the sample.
The brands and crews we build fishing gloves for.
Different buyers, different holds, different label rules — same grip platform and the same in-house decoration. What changes per account is which glove types and which branding we structure the order around, not the standard we hold.

Tackle & Fishing Brands
Adding a branded glove line to an existing SKU range.
Our handling: logo molded into the grip-print plus retail-ready packaging barcoded to your SKUs, so the range drops onto the peg alongside your other fishing accessories.

Charter Fleets & Guides
Crew and guest gloves that must match across the boat.
Our handling: fighting and fillet builds branded to the fleet, with a low mid-season top-up — see charter fleet uniforms.

Clubs & Tournaments
Team gloves carrying a club mark or event branding.
Our handling: one color program across fingerless and full-finger cuts so a whole team's gloves read as one kit.

Retail & Wholesale Distributors
Buying glove assortments to resell.
Our handling: a mixed assortment across all four types and the full size run, packed and labeled for retail so it's ready to sell on arrival.

Processing & Deckhand Crews
Mates and cleaning crews handling and filleting the catch.
Our handling: the cut- and puncture-resistant grip build spec'd to the fish and blades the job handles.
A fishing-apparel factory that builds gloves to a protection standard.
Cutting, decoration, palm bonding and inspection run under one roof, which is why a glove program stays consistent from the sample to the five-hundredth pair and from the first order to the reorder. Here's the standard behind it (factory-stated).



Protection, verified before bulk
UPF retention (AATCC 183), palm cut and abrasion resistance, and grip-print bond after repeated saltwater rinse are checked in-house against representative targets, so a protection claim on a glove is tested, not assumed.
Consistency logged to your style
Pattern, grading, grip-print recipe and material lot are reserved and logged, so pair five hundred matches pair one — the reason a mid-season top-up still matches the gloves already in the field.
Skin-safe, documented material inputs
The yarns, palm coatings and dyes on a glove that spends the day against skin and near the catch are spec'd and recorded per order, so what goes into the build is documented rather than left to a sourced blank.
Decorated and inspected in-house
Silicone grip-print, heat transfer and woven labels plus a pre-shipment AQL 2.5 check with a photo report all happen on our floor, so branding and protection aren't handed to an outside workshop. See our fabric technology or quality & workmanship.
Tell us the holds you're building for and we'll spec the line.
Send the glove types, rough quantities, size split and branding, and you'll hear back within 24 hours in plain English — with a glove program spec'd to how your anglers actually fish.
- Response within 24 hours (GMT+8)
- Low first-order minimums — from 100 pairs per style
- Sample fee credited back against your bulk order
- Worldwide shipping — DDP / DDU