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kakomu Registered: May 28, 2009 Total Posts: 3356 Country: United States |
The winter is coming. It's already cold in Chicago. I currently have some leather gloves and cheapie cotton gloves. Neither of which is good for photograph. The leather gives me next to no dexterity and the cotton gloves are too loose to feel anything. |
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JohnJ80 Registered: May 11, 2005 Total Posts: 5588 Country: United States |
What weather are you intending to shoot in? I'm up here in Minnesota and i spend a lot of time shooting alpine skiing (hours on the hill with no break sometimes in subzero cold). There's quite a range of options depending on what you are going to be doing. |
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brainiac Registered: Nov 22, 2005 Total Posts: 7524 Country: United Kingdom |
Woolly fingerless lined with thinsulate. |
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kakomu Registered: May 28, 2009 Total Posts: 3356 Country: United States |
JohnJ80 wrote: |
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bpark42 Registered: Jan 20, 2008 Total Posts: 1338 Country: United States |
I don't remember what they are called, but I use full wool gloves where you can fold back the fingertip section out of the way to expose your fingertips. I believe I found them in the hunting section of a sporting goods store. |
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helimat Registered: Apr 06, 2008 Total Posts: 3236 Country: Canada |
Viking 'Nitri-Dex' for wet & cold, still allows full dexterity without having to cut off the fingers. Viking 'Thermo Mega-Grip' for when it gets far below freezing, less dexterity, more warmth. The vulcanized palm is grippy even when wet. I have used both types for both photography and working on aircraft outdoors, in temperatures ranging from 5* C and wet to -20* C and absolutely freezing. (For the Yanks that is about 40* to -4* F.) Best thing is is that they are dirt cheap. |
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JohnJ80 Registered: May 11, 2005 Total Posts: 5588 Country: United States |
kakomu wrote: |
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mtbakerskier Registered: Feb 02, 2005 Total Posts: 1855 Country: United States |
I shoot skiing for a living, and always take my gloves off to shoot. If you dress properly, and keep your core and your head warm, your hands wont have any issues for short periods of time. |
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jeremy_clay Registered: Jan 14, 2008 Total Posts: 9093 Country: Canada |
brainiac wrote: |
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burningheart Registered: Mar 21, 2005 Total Posts: 1789 Country: Canada |
If you aren't too concerned about the macho man look then ladies wool knit gloves are an option, though stay away from the fashion design type. I use some black ladies wool knit gloves work and I can continue to use the controls without taking the gloves off. I've used them in -20C weather with strong north winds. |
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JohnJ80 Registered: May 11, 2005 Total Posts: 5588 Country: United States |
mtbakerskier wrote: |
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dasrocket Registered: Jul 13, 2006 Total Posts: 1723 Country: Canada |
Layer, layer, layer: Poly underwear overalls, thin fleece turtleneck and underpants, and a wicking undershell will do miracles. They will be as thin as a single layer of thick pyjamas and you can wear anything on top that you want so you don't look over-the-top expedition-dressed. |
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Andrew Burnett Registered: Jan 15, 2008 Total Posts: 144 Country: Canada |
I wear a thin pair of tight neoprene and leather gloves for most of the winter. If it's very cold (-30c) I'll generally switch off to thinsulate-lined wool mittens with a flap that exposes the finger tips. |
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Masahara Registered: May 20, 2005 Total Posts: 263 Country: United States |
For gloves I always bring a pair of Under Armour gloves (about $20 from a local sports store). They're very thin and have excellent movement. (closest thing I've found to having nothing on) I can still feel the AF-on button and everything else through them. They are also thin enough to fit through the hand strap on a 1D if you don't have it set too tight. They have a "grippy" part on the palm section and a fleece type of top on the other side. I originally discovered them after years of searching for a glove I can easily use American Sign Language in without significantly hindering my movements. This is one of only two gloves I've ever worn which meet that challenge despite trying many, which means it translates similarly for camera use. |
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Joe T Registered: Dec 30, 2005 Total Posts: 42 Country: United States |
Polypropylene head to toe then add layers of fleece and/or wool. With an outer shell to STOP the wind and/or rain. |
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matanuska Registered: Feb 17, 2006 Total Posts: 530 Country: United States |
kakomu wrote: |
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Dpic_arctic Registered: Nov 01, 2009 Total Posts: 2374 Country: United States |
When you look for a pair of gloves, DO NOT get tight gloves. Get slightly looser gloves, and whenever you need to warm up, slip your hands into a larger mitten or your pockets. If that's not enough, get chemical hand warmers Good grief...you're only in Chicago. I'm in Alaska and it's a toasty 18 degrees right now...it really starts to get fun at -30 with a -65 degree wind chill photographing the World Ice Art Competition. |