Summary
What this review covers
This review looks at the long cuff, puncture-resistant build, medium sizing, color visibility, and thorn-pruning role of the Magid BE195TM gloves.
Pros
The upside
- The long cuff covers the wrist and forearm during rose and cane cleanup.
- The puncture-resistant build suits contact with thorny stems and brush.
- The brown and purple color pattern is easy to find near tools and clippings.
Cons
The tradeoffs
- Medium sizing should be checked against the gardener's hand measurements.
- Long gloves need a dry place to air after damp pruning sessions.
Who it is for
Fit and feel
Good match:
These gloves fit gardeners who prune roses, refresh cane fruit, trim prickly shrubs, and gather thorny cleanup material into bags or brush piles.
What to know:
Keep the glove cuff open enough for comfort and close enough to stay settled as the arm moves through stems.
Where to check it
Check Magid Professional Rose Pruning Gloves BE195TM
Open the current merchant listing if the buyer fit and tradeoffs still line up.
- Amazon opens the Magid Professional Rose Pruning Gloves BE195TM product page.
Breakdown
Full review
Long gloves for rose and cane work
Roses, berry canes, and brushy shrubs create contact points all along the hand and forearm. A long glove gives the gardener a clear coverage step before the first cut.
Magid Professional Rose Pruning Gloves BE195TM are built around long forearm protection, a puncture-resistant feel, and a brown-and-purple color pattern that stays visible around pruning tools.
The cuff covers the reach
The long cuff helps cover the forearm during the reach into rose stems, cane rows, holly, and brush piles. That matters when cut pieces need to be lifted, sorted, and carried away.
The puncture-resistant build gives the glove a sturdy role around thorny plant material and rough cleanup.
Size and storage deserve attention
These gloves are listed in medium, so hand measurements matter. A glove that fits well makes pruner handles, cleanup bags, and stems easier to manage.
After damp garden work, brush off soil and let the gloves air in a dry place before the next session.
Good match
These gloves fit gardeners who prune roses, refresh cane fruit, trim prickly shrubs, and gather thorny cleanup material into bags or brush piles.
What to know
Keep the glove cuff open enough for comfort and close enough to stay settled as the arm moves through stems.