
To make capacitive touchscreens work through gloves, you need a conductive pathway between the screen and your finger(s). Commercial touchscreen-friendly gloves made with conductive fabric at the fingertips are available, and if you’re handy with a needle you can use special thread to sew conductive stitches into the fingertips of a glove you already own.
If you’re not handy with a needle, this no-sew “hard” method, using the button or “cap” half of a snap fastener, may be more your style. Depending on your skills and personal tastes, it may come out better- or worse-looking than the “soft” method. In any case, it will certainly be faster, and, applied to a nice pair of new gloves, makes for a useful gift with a personal handmade touch. You can, of course, add snaps to as many of a glove’s finger- and/or thumb-tips as you please, which may be useful for multi-touch displays.
The round lip of the snap socket inside the glove makes it very easy to index your fingertip with the “sweet spot” on the outside of the glove, and the hard, rounded surface of the button means the actual point of contact with the screen is small and precise. There’s no “fat fingers” effect with these gloves, and I’ve found that they require almost no mental adjustment to go back and forth between gloves and bare fingers. Finally, I should mention that the brass and/or nickel these snaps are made of should pose no risk of scratching even the softest glass.


Biggest catch I see to this is your fingertips will get awfully cold — that’s a large conductive surface.
Actually it doesn’t. At least not in my experience, so far. The socket inside the glove only contacts your finger over a narrow circular rim, without much surface area.
Wouldn’t it be a whole lot easier just to have a cut in the fingertip of the glove which was normally covered by an sewn on overlapping flap? So when it comes time to tap, you just pull on the glove tip a bit (teeth if necessary (fart joke utterly unnecessary)) to denude a bit of finger pad, do your tapping and then when finished pull back under cover …?
Doesn’t seem so to me, actually. But then, a lot of the point of this idea is that you don’t have to do any sewing, at all.
Many stores sell gloves with a covering mitten-like flap (they probably have a real name, other than “glittens” or “muves”, but I don’t know what it is). That’s what I wear, and this is one reason why!
// What's Trending
Raspberry Pi Design Contest
Teardrop Camper Trailer
Dad Builds Son an Iron Man Arc Reactor
Seventeen Sneaky Secret Hides
What to do with an 800 Lb Eucalyptus Slab
10 Things to Connect to Your Raspberry Pi
What does this 2×6 have to do with Father’s Day?
Farm Drones Take Flight
// What's Shared
A better way to slice a pumpkin
DIY Nerf Darts
100 Dollar Store Organization Ideas for Craft Rooms and Beyond
In the Maker Shed: Minty Boost USB Charger
Mad’s Mouse House
Lace Princess Crowns
I Have a (Puzzling) Dream
Play the Rings of a Tree Trunk Like a Record
// Most Commented
Plastic Bags into Plastic Blocks: Revisited
10 Hot New Boards to Watch
Why the Maker Movement is Here to Stay
MAKE Asks: Roadside Hacks
Ten Tips for Hand Saws and Blades
DIY Hacks & How To’s: Convert From Battery Power to AC
How To Make Your Own Laundry Detergent
Greetings From The Fourth Maker Faire North Carolina
Trending Topics
Get our Newsletters
About Maker Media
Subscribe
to MAKE!
Get the print and digital versions when you subscribe