Reddit Reddit reviews CARA Moisturizing Eczema Cotton Gloves, Medium, 24 Pair

We found 6 Reddit comments about CARA Moisturizing Eczema Cotton Gloves, Medium, 24 Pair. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Beauty
Foot & Hand Care
Moisturizing Gloves
Foot, Hand & Nail Care
CARA Moisturizing Eczema Cotton Gloves, Medium, 24 Pair
Comfortable 100% cotton gloves; aids the absorption of hand creams and ointments to prevent dry handsHypoallergenic and can also be used to conceal skin disorders; prevents staining of fabrics and clothingGreat value as machine washable and reusablePerfect for material, photography, archival and art handling, jewelry, silver and coins inspections tooEach glove fits either hand and easy to get on / off100% cottonWashableReuseable
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6 Reddit comments about CARA Moisturizing Eczema Cotton Gloves, Medium, 24 Pair:

u/av1cenna · 3 pointsr/analog

Scanning is costly, yeah. If you shoot a roll a week or more, it's a no-brainer, cause you'll make back your costs on what you save in paying for lab scans pretty quick. If you shoot less than that, "it depends".

If you're just shooting 35mm, a used Plustek is a great way to go, or even a new one if you want a warranty. If you also shoot medium format, I'd look for a used Epson V700 or higher; I wouldn't bother with the lower number Epson flatbeds; the resolution just isn't enough for me to make it worth the hassle of scanning.

If you already have a DSLR or other interchangeable lens camera, and especially if you already have a macro lens for it, you can also try DSLR scanning. Even if you don't have a camera, you can get set up for around $500-700 depending on what you need to buy. If I had to do it from scratch here's what I'd get.

  • Nikon D3200 (24mp) and 40mm f/2.8 macro (really sharp lens) -- used $300
  • For 35mm scanning: Nikon ES-2 film holder -- new $140
  • For 120 scanning: Lomography Digitaliza film holder -- new $35
  • LED tracing pad for backlighting -- new $23
  • Cheap tripod and ballhead (tons of these on amazon) -- new $66
  • Rocket blower -- new $10
  • Cotton gloves 25pk -- new $24
  • Adobe Lightroom + Photoshop package -- $10/month
  • Negative Lab Pro lightroom plugin license -- $99 one-time

    So all in that's everything you need for DLSR scanning, and it comes to $707 plus the ongoing LR subscription. You could cut the cost a lot if you already own some of those things, or by using a cheaper 35mm holder than the Nikon ES-2, such as a 35mm-sized Digitaliza, or rigging up an older Nikon ES-1. You also don't need NLP and Lightroom; you could get away with free software like the GIMP. You might also be able to find a cheaper tripod at a yardsale or thrift store that will work fine, but they can be clunkier than modern ones.

    All that is why people say "if you already have a camera" with DSLR scanning. Otherwise, why not just get a brand new Plustek 8100i AI for $490 and get about the same level of image quality for less money, or even less with a used model. So, it kind of depends on your personal situation.
u/-thuggy · 3 pointsr/DarkNetMarkets

i would worry about leaving dna more than fingerprints in your case.

what i used to do:

  1. put these one first

    CARA Dermatological Cotton Gloves, Medium, 24 Pair https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CIBQCT2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_TaMGyb1QGDGS3

  2. then put on the nitrile gloves

  3. always wore long sleeve shirt.
u/branomac · 2 pointsr/eczema

I just bought these and washed them to use last night for my arms and legs. They are pretty tight around my legs though. triamcinolone -> Cerave -> Aquaphor
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00BF2XOQ4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1
For my hands I use cotton gloves, same moisturizers and steroid creams
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00CIBQCT2/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/Monsteraplant · 2 pointsr/eczema

Try limiting your fingernail's access to your arms by wearing gloves.

I have eczema on my hands and arms (and everywhere), and scratch like crazy at night. I usually manage to take the gloves off during the night so I wear cotton gloves with a really long sock on top, that is pulled all the way up to armpit making my hand into a comfortable fist. You probably need an extra person to help get this armor on.

I didn't used to have eczema on my hands, but gloves and/or socks is still a good preventative to stop scratching damage on the rest of your body.

As my hands are very eczema-y I typically wear clean gloves almost every night. These are a solid buy if you need many pairs - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CIBQCT2/ref=sr_ph_1_s_it?ie=UTF8&qid=1484511796&sr=sr-1&keywords=cotton+gloves

u/zigmus64 · 1 pointr/eczema

Put these on right after you apply.

Biggest downside is that you can't use touch screens.