Bamllum Rubber Kitchen Dishwashing Gloves - 4 Pairs Colorful Reusable Household Cleaning Gloves for Washing Dishes and Cleaning Tasks, Flexible Long-lasting and Non-Slip

Rubber Kitchen Dishwashing Gloves - 4 Pairs Colorful Reusable Household Cleaning Gloves for Washing Dishes and Cleaning Tasks, Flexible Long-lasting and Non-Slip

Features

  • Material: These household cleaning gloves are made of soft and skin-friendly natural rubber, providing protection from corrosive liquids and keeping your hands and clothes dry. Initially, they may have a rubbery smell, but airing them out should eliminate the odor
  • Non-Slip Design: The palm and fingers of these kitchen gloves feature granules that increase friction, ensuring a better grip and control. Keeping these gloves in a cool and dry place can extend their lifespan
  • Comfortable Fit: The material of the dishwashing gloves is very soft, with a thin layer of planting velvet inside that won't shift when worn, providing excellent comfort and softness. They also absorb moisture and sweat, keeping your hands warm and dry, making them perfect for extended use
  • Multi-Purpose: These versatile rubber gloves are suitable for a variety of tasks, including kitchen and bathroom work, pet grooming, household cleaning, home improvement, gardening, car washing, dishwashing, painting, furniture refurbishing, and more
  • Packaging: This set includes gloves in four different colors, making them easy to distinguish and suitable for various purposes

Specifications

Color Blue+pink+yellow+red
Size Medium
Unit Count 4

A set of four medium reusable natural rubber household gloves (blue, pink, yellow, red) for dishwashing and a range of cleaning and maintenance tasks. They feature a soft, skin‑friendly construction with a thin planting-velvet lining that absorbs moisture, granulated palms and fingers for non‑slip grip, and protect hands and clothes from liquids; an initial rubber odor should dissipate with airing and storing in a cool, dry place.

Model Number: B0BYJDCWP9

Bamllum Rubber Kitchen Dishwashing Gloves - 4 Pairs Colorful Reusable Household Cleaning Gloves for Washing Dishes and Cleaning Tasks, Flexible Long-lasting and Non-Slip Review

4.6 out of 5

Bright, color-coded gloves aren’t going to make scrubbing a sink exciting, but they can make the job kinder on your hands. I put the Bamllum rubber gloves through several weeks of routine household work—dishwashing, bathroom scrubbing, a bit of gardening prep, and washing the car—and they’ve settled into a reliable, low-cost staple I don’t have to think about.

Design and materials

These are natural rubber gloves with a thin flocked (planting-velvet) lining. The rubber exterior has a fine, grippy texture over the palms and fingers, while the inside is soft and slightly fuzzy. The lining matters more than it seems: it helps wick moisture, reduces that clammy feeling during longer sessions, and makes the gloves much easier to pull on and off even if your hands are a bit damp.

Each set includes four pairs in different colors. I ended up assigning a color per task—blue for dishes, pink for bathrooms, yellow for general cleaning, red for the garage—which made it simple to avoid cross-contamination. The cuffs are long enough to fold back into a reverse cuff, which helps stop water from creeping down your forearms and into the glove.

A quick note on material: natural rubber typically contains latex. If you have a latex allergy, these won’t be the right choice.

Fit and comfort

I used a medium and found the fit slightly generous in the palm with a reasonable finger length. The rubber is supple, so dexterity is good for this category—you can still pick up bottle caps, scrub inside narrow glassware, and manipulate spray triggers without feeling clumsy. The lining stays put; it doesn’t bunch or twist when you remove the gloves, which is a small detail that adds up over time.

If you’re between sizes, consider how you’ll use them. For heavy scrubbing where you want more room at the knuckles, sizing up can help. For detail work like washing stemware, a closer fit will feel more secure. Those with longer-than-average fingers might appreciate a size up, while slimmer hands may prefer staying true to size.

Grip and cuff design

The textured granules on the palm and fingers are genuinely effective. On soapy plates and slick glass, the extra friction reduces slip and lets you handle heavier items with confidence. It’s not an aggressive texture—just enough to keep brushes and bottles steadier in wet conditions.

The cuffs are a highlight. They extend far enough to overlap a sleeve or be turned into a reverse cuff. Folding them back became my default for dishwashing; it channels drips away and noticeably cuts down on those “how did water get in there?” surprises.

Performance across common tasks

  • Dishwashing: No issues with grip or feel. Hot water softens many gloves, but these held their shape in typical dishwashing temperatures. The lining kept my hands from feeling swampy during longer sessions.
  • Bathroom cleaning: With standard household cleaners, the rubber offers adequate barrier protection and resisted the routine mix of alkaline and bleach-based products I use. I still recommend rinsing both the gloves and your hands after exposure to harsher chemicals.
  • Gardening and DIY: For light potting, wiping surfaces, and handling damp soil, they’re fine. I wouldn’t use them where thorns or sharp edges are common; while the rubber is reasonably thick for kitchen duty, it’s not meant for puncture-prone jobs.
  • Car washing: The grip on sponges and microfiber mitts is solid, and the extra cuff length helps keep your sleeves dry when you’re working around wheel wells.

Durability and care

For the price and category, durability is respectable. After a couple of months of regular household use, my dishwashing pair loosened slightly at the wrist but remained functional and comfortable. Texture wear on the palm was minimal. I did pick up a tiny surface nick while handling a sharp-edged can lid—not a failure of the glove so much as a reminder of their intended duties.

You’ll get more life out of them with basic care:
- Rinse off soap and cleaners after use.
- Turn them cuff-side down to drip dry; then store in a cool, dry place.
- Avoid direct sun, heaters, or very hot water, which will age rubber faster.
- Don’t soak them in solvents or oils; natural rubber degrades with petroleum-based products.

There’s a faint rubber smell out of the package. Hanging them to air overnight knocked this down to a level I stopped noticing.

Safety and protection

For household use, splash protection is solid. The rubber forms a consistent barrier and the longer cuff reduces the chance of liquid ingress. They’re not chemical-resistant gloves in the industrial sense, so I wouldn’t use them for concentrated solvents, strong acids, or long exposures to undiluted bleach. But for mainstream kitchen and bath cleaners, they held up without discoloration or tackiness.

If you have sensitive skin, the combination of a soft lining and a barrier to detergents is welcome. The lining kept my hands dry, and I didn’t notice any irritation. Again, those with latex allergies should opt for nitrile or PVC-based alternatives.

Value

You get four pairs in the set, and the per-pair cost undercuts many single-pack offerings at local stores. Functionally, the variety of colors is more than just cosmetic—dedicating pairs to specific rooms or tasks extends longevity and simplifies hygiene.

Are they the longest-lasting gloves I’ve used? No. Thicker, more expensive professional-grade gloves will outlast these for heavy-duty or daily industrial use. But for a typical home, rotating through four pairs gives you plenty of mileage before you need to replace anything. That balance of comfort, performance, and low replacement cost is the main appeal.

Where they fall short

  • Not puncture-resistant: Sharp can edges and thorns can nick the rubber. For those jobs, step up to a thicker gauge glove.
  • Heat and chemical limits: They’re household gloves, not lab or solvent gloves. Keep them away from petroleum solvents, and limit exposure to very hot water.
  • Sizing can be tricky for edge cases: If you have very long fingers or very slim hands, you may need to experiment with size. I’d err toward a snug fit for detail work and slightly looser for heavy scrubbing.

Who will like these

  • Home cooks and frequent dishwashers who want a comfortable, grippy glove with a softer interior lining.
  • Apartment dwellers and families who prefer color-coding for hygiene between rooms.
  • Anyone looking for a budget-friendly multi-pack to cover dishes, bathrooms, and general cleaning without babying a single premium pair.

The bottom line

The Bamllum gloves hit the sweet spot for everyday home use: soft on the inside, grippy on the outside, long cuffs that actually help, and a price that makes it easy to keep multiple pairs in rotation. They’re not built for thorns, jagged metal, or aggressive chemicals, but that’s not what most of us need for dishes and weekly cleaning.

Recommendation: I recommend these if you want a comfortable, affordable set for routine kitchen and household tasks. They provide a dependable grip, useful cuff design, and a lining that keeps hands drier and happier during longer sessions. If your work involves sharp edges, heavy-duty scrubbing day in and day out, or exposure to solvents—or if you have a latex allergy—look to a thicker nitrile or PVC glove. Otherwise, this set is a practical, good-value choice that makes daily cleaning a bit more pleasant.



Project Ideas

Business

Color-Coded Cleaning Kits for Short-Term Rentals

Assemble and sell ready-to-use cleaning kits (kitchen, bathroom, laundry, pet care) using the four colored gloves to designate tasks or rooms. Market directly to Airbnb hosts and property managers via local outreach, online listing sites, and partnership deals; include QR-coded checklists and refill bundles for recurring revenue.


Branded Glove Subscription for Small Businesses

Offer monthly replacement gloves in branded packaging to salons, cafes, pet groomers, and boutique cleaning services. Position the service as hygiene compliance and convenience — tiered plans (monthly/quarterly), optional custom color/labeling, and discounts for bulk commitments.


DIY Craft & Kid-Party Kits (Etsy/Local Retail)

Package glove-based craft kits (puppets, planter kits, stamping art sets) with instructions and small add-ons (felt, seeds, plaster packets) and sell on Etsy, at craft fairs, or to preschools. Offer themed seasonal kits (Halloween glove monsters, holiday ornament casts) to boost repeat sales.


Workshops & Corporate Team-Building Events

Run paid workshops teaching creative glove projects (planters, puppets, textured painting) for community centers, coworking spaces, and corporate team-building. Charge per head and sell take-home kits; partner with event planners and offer mobile workshops for parties and team retreats.


B2B Bulk Supply + Co‑Branding

Supply medium-quality, colorful gloves in bulk to cleaning companies, restaurants, and pet-care chains with options for co-branded sleeves or boxed sets. Upsell: bundled eco-cleaner concentrates, instruction cards, and reusable storage caddies. Use targeted sales outreach and sample packs to land contracts.

Creative

Textured Paint Stamps

Use the granulated palms and fingers as stamp surfaces: press the glove (or sections cut from it) into paint and stamp repeating textured patterns onto paper, fabric, or canvas. Try layering colors and using different glove colors for multi-tonal prints; cut fingers off to create small circular or linear stamps for borders.


Glove Planters & Vertical Garden

Turn gloves into hanging micro-planters: fill fingertips with lightweight soil and a seedling or succulents, knot or stitch the cuff to hold soil, and hang several from a board or frame for a colorful vertical garden. The rubber keeps moisture in and the color-coding helps track plant types or watering schedules.


Puppet & Sensory Toy Kit

Make soft, washable hand puppets by stuffing gloves and adding felt features, buttons, or embroidered faces. Create sensory kits for toddlers by sewing textured patches onto gloves or filling fingers with rice/beans (sealed) to make sound-and-feel toys for play therapy or classrooms.


Disposable Casting Molds

Use gloves as single-use molds for plaster, wax, or soap: pour material into a glove finger or into the whole glove, let set, then cut away the rubber for an irregular organic form. Great for making ornaments, candles, soaps, or unique ceramic texture negatives.


Tool for Clay & Furniture Texturing

Press the glove’s granulated palm into wet clay or paint layers on refurbished furniture to impart a non-slip, tactile texture. Use gloves as slip-scrapers, texture stamps, or protective hands while creating distinctive finishes on DIY furniture and pottery.