Fast delivery for 12″ rubber glove with cotton linning-rough finish Munich Factory

Short Description:

Heavy duty rubber glove, made of 100% natural latex. 12″ length(31cm), rough finish, seamless, cotton lining, left/right hand, 210g/pair, 120pairs/case. Using for Isolater, dry box, blast cabinet, glove box, etc.


Product Detail

FAQ

Product Tags

continue to improve, to ensure product quality in line with market and customer standard requirements. Our company has a quality assurance system have been established. Mission: Optimize our professional technology, product and service; Fast delivery for 12″ rubber glove with cotton linning-rough finish Munich Factory, Welcome to build the well and long standing business relationships with our company to create a glorious future together .customers' satisfaction is our eternal pursuit


Heavy duty rubber glove, made of 100% natural latex.

12″ length(31cm), rough finish, seamless, cotton lining, left/right hand, 210g/pair, 120pairs/case.

Using for Isolater, dry box, blast cabinet, glove box, etc.

  • Previous:
  • Next:
  • FAQ Content




  • You can use Silicone Caulk to make a cheap mold. In this video I make a mold of my IronMan Mark VII forearm rocket launcher.
    Thinning out the silicone with naphtha in a 50/50 mixture will allow you to capture the details of your master. Subsequent layers can be applied mixing less naphtha , say 35% naphtha and 65% silicone for the second layer, then 25% and 75%.
    Coats should be applied within a little over an hour of each other. The Final coat can be pure silicone Caulk if you wish. In this video I did 3 or 4 layers of silicone caulk, more can be applied if you wish.



    Our industry is blessed with a number of extremely talented designers. But when it comes to honest to goodness design “rock stars” (with all the trash-your-hotel-room, follow-your-weirdest-obsession swagger that phrase implies), you’re squarely in Sagmeister & Walsh territory. So when the nonprofit Society of Design wanted to approach them to be guest speakers at their conference, they “felt the need to do something unexpected,” admits Craig Welsh, principal/creative director of design firm Go Welsh and co-founder of the Society.

    Known as design risk takers themselves, Craig figured the pair would appreciate an unconventional approach, so he sent them an invitation they could not ignore…letterpress printed on 14 feet of paper towels.

    More accurately, the message was printed with hand-applied pressure using wood type on the floor of the print shop, says Craig. “It feels appropriately positioned as something sent to Sagmeister & Walsh.” As for the print itself, “the dimpling of the printing against the patterning of the paper towels” made for a particularly arresting effect.

    Not surprisingly, things didn’t go exactly as planned.

    “Once the printing was completed the paper towels returned to their original state as a roll…and were shipped in a box,” Craig explains. “However, we were having LOTS of trouble with the ink drying (we used rubber-based ink) and, rather than waiting days for it to dry, we moved forward anyway.

    “So when we packed the roll of paper towels in the box we also included two pairs of yellow rubber gloves and a warning note to wear the gloves before handling the contents of the box.” This detail wasn’t only a practical one, the designer contends, but also “the gloves and note made the shipment more interesting.”

    As you would expect of a design duo famous for mailing nude postcards of themselves to announce their partnership, Sagmeister & Walsh showed themselves admirers of this unusual gesture. At least the former did; Stefan Sagmeister spoke to a sold-out, 350+ crowd at the Society of Design’s event that year.

    Send your message to us:

    INQUIRY NOW
    • [cf7ic]

    Related Products

    INQUIRY NOW
    • [cf7ic]