How Dual-Sided Heating Improves Thermal Balance
Traditional heated gloves mainly heat the back of the hand, which often leads to uneven warmth. Dual-sided heating solves this by distributing heat across both the back and palm, creating more stable thermal performance during use.
This design improves overall heat balance in cold environments where both exposure and grip-related heat loss continuously affect hand temperature.

Why Traditional Heated Gloves Are Uneven
The back of the hand is typically used for heating integration because it is easier to place heating elements there. However, the palm experiences constant pressure, movement, and direct contact with objects, which increases heat loss during real use.
How Dual-Sided Heating Works
- Back heating layer: Primary heat output for overall temperature stability
- Palm heating layer: Reduces heat loss during gripping and external contact
- Balanced distribution: Maintains more consistent warmth across different hand movements
Application Scenarios
- Skiing in low-temperature environments
- Photography and outdoor operation work
- Riding and handlebar exposure conditions
- Long-duration static cold environments
Related Products
Gloves – Full-Hand Heating Solution
Photography Gloves
A heating system that distributes warmth to both the back and palm of the hand to improve thermal balance.
Because the back side is structurally easier to integrate heating elements, while the palm has higher movement constraints.
Yes. It reduces localized heat loss in high-contact use scenarios such as gripping or riding.