Everything You Need to Know About Gloving | Insomniac (2024)

Insomniac MagazineInterviews

May 15, 2015Katie Bain

Brian Lim got into gloving by accident. Around 2010, while at the Los Angeles club Avalon, Lim’s girlfriend (now his fiancé) put a pair of light-up gloves on him for the first time, and he proceeded to give a makeshift light performance for a few people in the crowd. He found that he not only enjoyed what he was doing, but that he was good at it.

“As a guy with two left feet,” he says, “I was amazed, and really got hooked.”

Everything You Need to Know About Gloving | Insomniac (1)

Lim found, however, that there was no real community around gloving, and that the products at the time were less than dazzling. He thus started an event called Friday Night Lights, for which he invited fellow enthusiasts to an In ‘n Out parking lot in the L.A. suburb of Baldwin Park. Here, he bumped music and sold products out of his trunk. He had to relocate to different parking lots each week, as the crowd grew from 20 to 50 to 100 and up.

In time, Lim founded EmazingLights, which sells gloving products online and at five stores in SoCal, Texas, Florida, Colorado and Canada. (Lim is also the founder and CEO of festival fashion company iHeartRaves.) While gloving is not allowed at Insomniac events, the culture thrives in clubs, live sets and at gloving-specific tournaments, including the BOSS Gloving Competition, which EmazingLights hosts this Saturday, May 16 in West Covina, CA. Based on social media reach, Lim estimates there are currently 150,000 glovers around the world.

“Being a glover and seeing all the talent in the scene—these kids are practicing every single day for hours and creating real art.”

Gloving and light shows are so specific to the world of electronic music. Where did the activity come from?
Gloving really originated at Insomniac festivals. The ban was a bummer, but what it really did was motivate me to showcase gloving as a legitimate art form. I wasn’t happy with how gloving was portrayed and seen by the public. Being a glover and seeing all the talent in the scene—these kids are practicing every single day for hours and creating real art, but it’s not seen that way.

Do you think gloving was banned because of its association with drugs?
I believe the first reason is because it’s a fire hazard. People naturally give light shows on the floor, so when you’re walking around and there’s a bunch of glovers on the floor, people trip over people. And yes, with the rave scene, the negative stigma [with drugs] did not help. So I wasn’t happy with how gloving was portrayed and seen by the public and thought, “How do I legitimize this?”

How did you?
I decided to create the International Gloving Championship, which showcases gloving as a sport. We have judges, and they judge on creativity, musicality, flow—things that make a good light show. We have hundreds of competitors, judges and sponsors, and it really shows that gloving is a lot more than people waving their hands around.

What differentiates a good glover from a great glover?
It’s kind of like asking what makes a good dancer versus a great dancer. I think what people really do respect is musicality and being able to freestyle. Because gloving was really born out of the festival scene, you really don’t know what songs the DJ is going to play. Being able to adapt to what the DJ is playing and be on beat—while controlling your colors and flashing patterns—that really differentiates glovers.

Is there a musical genre that’s optimal to glove to, or is it a personal preference?
It’s definitely a personal preference. EDM is definitely the dominant genre of music for glovers, but it’s spread over to trap. Trap is super popular. No matter what, you’ve gotta move to the beat. You’ve gotta interpret the music and showcase it with your movements.

What elements go into a performance?
The interesting thing about gloving is that it’s a real one-on-one experience. It’s really the glover giving his full, undivided attention to one or several people for two to three minutes. They don’t repeat moves—otherwise they’ll lose that attention. Being unique, timing that to the music, controlling your colors, your flashing patter, clicking each light individually—there’s a lot running through the mind of a glover.

It sounds intimate.
Yeah, that’s definitely one of the things that sets gloving apart from a lot of other art forms like poi performances, which usually happen on a stage for a large group of people. As a glover, you’re really giving your all to this one person right in front of you and reading their reactions and what they like—kind of like how a DJ has to feel the crowd and adjust the set.

Do you actually hypnotize people?
Oh, absolutely. There are different styles of gloving, of course, but some styles are really up-close and personal. There are also styles that are farther away, with full arm-cutting or finger-cutting, so you can see the actual movements. Impacting is another style of gloving that’s really up-close in their face and involves a lot of light manipulation.

Are you also dancing while you glove?
It’s interesting, because gloving has really evolved. Today there is a lot of full-dance gloving going on. It was featured on the MTV show America’s Best New Dance Crew last season. The last three crews left had to glove, and they were doing full-body dancing incorporating gloving.

What was it like seeing your sport break into the mainstream like that?
It was an awesome experience. They had invited us to work with those crews for a month and a half. At first, we were really flattered that some of the world’s best dancers were going to try gloving for the first time. We were like, “These guys are going to pick this up so easily.” It was crazy, though, because they were admiring what our glovers were doing because they had so much finger control. None of the professionals could keep up.

Tell me more about your event this weekend.
It’s a derivative of IGC, which is the Super Bowl of gloving that happens every year. BOSS is the local competition that we host in our stores across the US. We have five stores right now, and these competitions are qualifiers for people to get into IGC, which happens at the Yost Theatre in Santa Ana. There are about 500 glovers, 50 judges, and spectators. It’s… also kind of a light and arts convention.

What’s the newest technology in gloving?
It’s called the eLite Element. They’re gloves that came out just last week. It has accelerometer technology, so it’s motion activated and knows when you’re going slow or fast and automatically changes your color and flashing patterns. In the past, people would have to change every single finger to change their modes while they were giving the show.

That’s like the difference between DJing on vinyl and DJing with a USB.
Yes, it gives you the ability to change automatically, but you still have to have speed control to utilize it correctly. It’s really an addition; it doesn’t make it that you press a button and you’re done.

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Everything You Need to Know About Gloving | Insomniac (2024)

FAQs

Everything You Need to Know About Gloving | Insomniac? ›

The interesting thing about gloving is that it's a real one-on-one experience. It's really the glover giving his full, undivided attention to one or several people for two to three minutes. They don't repeat moves—otherwise they'll lose that attention.

Why did gloving get banned? ›

In 2010 an electronic dance music promotions company, Insomniac Events, banned gloving from all its events citing drug connotations and safety issues.

How to get good at gloving? ›

The five beginner moves that you need to master in order to build a strong foundation for your gloving are finger rolls/waves, stacking, liquid, figure 8s and finger tuts.

What happened to emazing lights after Shark Tank? ›

Lim accepted a deal from sharks Mark Cuban and Daymond John for $650,000 for 5% equity in the company and 20% of the revenue made from licensing deals. In January 2023, EmazingLights closed down citing devastating company losses due to the gloving ban at major festivals and global pandemic.

What are the objectives of gloving? ›

Gloves are required to be worn according to Standard Precautions to provide a barrier between the patient and sterile surgical team member to reduce microbial and body fluid contamination of the surgical wound. Additionally the gloves protect the team member from the patient's blood and body fluids.

Do wrist gloves work? ›

There are some small studies that indicate that compression gloves may reduce pain levels, but nothing to suggest that these types of gloves work as a long-term treatment. For most people who wear these types of gloves, pain and tingling will probably eventually return after you take the gloves off.

What is impact gloving? ›

Impact gloves are a type of personal protection equipment (PPE) designed to help prevent hand injuries in work environments with high risks of impact hazards. Industries that are most susceptible to impact injuries include the oil and gas industry, mining, and manufacturing.

Is gloving still popular? ›

Being grouped into a stigma has been difficult for gloving. But even with these bans, gloving was still a growing movement. Nobody will ever stop us from Gloving! In the more recent years, many of us leaders in the industry are constantly pushing the art form and the side of Gloving that only us Glovers know about.

How did Lori Greiner get money? ›

In the mid-1990s, she invented a plastic earring organizer, patented it and launched her first company. The earring organizer was an immediate hit at JCPenney, which allowed Greiner to expand her business into other product categories, such as travel, electronics and household items.

What was the most successful item on Shark Tank? ›

1. Bombas. Bombas, a sock company that now also makes bras and t-shirts, came to the minds of co-founders David Heath and Randy Goldberg when they learned that the number-one most-requested clothing item in homeless shelters was socks.

What are the do's and don'ts of glove use? ›

  • other bodily fluids. Don't wash or re-use.
  • environment or patient. Do don fresh gloves after.
  • surface or environment. Don't wear gloves that are.
  • visibly soiled or damaged. Do ensure proper glove fit.
  • before performing tasks. Don't touch your face.
  • while wearing gloves. Do wash hands before.
  • and after glove use.

What is open gloving? ›

Open gloving is performed when not wearing a gown or when replacing gloves intraoperatively (e.g. to change gloves contaminated by stomach content during gastrotomy prior to abdominal closure) and when a sterile assistant is unavailable to reglove you sterilely.

Is gloving banned in clubs? ›

Gloving has been banned at all Insomniac events and most other major EDM festivals including HARD, Mad Decent, and Ultra. Light up gloves have also been prohibited by many different venues from clubs to local venues and even the infamous Red Rocks Amphitheater.

Why did they ban latex gloves? ›

Latex is a component of natural rubber. The use of disposable latex gloves can trigger allergic reactions in persons who are sensitive to latex. Also, when people wear latex gloves to prepare meals, those particles can get into the food.

Is Top Glove still banned in US? ›

The US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) imposed a ban on gloves made by Top Glove in July 2020 over forced labour concerns. The ban was lifted 14 months later on Sept 10, 2021. The US is a major export market for Top Glove, accounting for 25% of its sales volume.

When did the FDA ban powdered gloves? ›

Effective January 18, 2017, the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) placed a ban on powdered patient examination gloves, powdered surgical gloves, and also on powder for lubricating a surgeon's gloves. The FDA ban also applies to veterinary use such as veterinary clinical care and animal surgery centers.

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