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Best boxing gloves 2018: The best gloves around, from Everlast, Venum and Sandee

Fancy going a few rounds? Here are some of the best boxing gloves on the market

Whether you’re an amateur boxer or a professional pugilist, a good pair of boxing gloves is a must-have. Sure, you can borrow gloves from your gym, but buying your own lets you choose the design and style that best suits you – and as you use them they’ll mould themselves to your hands, for more comfort and a better fit.
However, there are a lot of boxing gloves out there to choose from, and picking the wrong pair – whether for sparring, bag work or muay thai – could even do you an injury. Here we'll help you choose the best boxing gloves for your needs, and provide a roundup of some of the best on the market right now.

How to choose the best boxing gloves for you

What do you plan to do with the gloves?
You might think that’s a daft question, but different glove designs focus on the different activities involved in boxing. Fighting gloves are for when you’re actually in the ring: these are the lightest and least padded, to inflict the most force. Training gloves are for sparring with an opponent, or hitting mitts. They can also be used for bag work, but bag gloves are designed specifically for that: they’re more heavily padded to protect your hands while you’re pummeling a 100-pound bag.
There are also gloves sold specifically for muay thai boxing, and fingerless gloves for MMA (mixed martial arts), but here we’re focusing on traditional boxing.
If you’re new to boxing, and unsure which to pick then training gloves are the best all-rounders, but they’re not ideal for a proper bout. Be warned too that if you’re shopping on Amazon, you’ll often see one pair of gloves described as suitable for all activities, which is never really the case. Search via the subcategories under “boxing gloves” instead and you’ll get much more accurate results.
What size do you need?
A little confusingly, gloves are measured by weight rather than size. This doesn’t make it easy to find the right fit, but here’s a table that will point you in the right direction:
SizeBoxer’s weightBoxer’s height
8ozUp to 10stUp to 5ft 4in
10ozUp to 10stUp to 5ft 4in
12ozUp to 11st 4lbsUp to 5ft 6in
14oz10st and above5ft 4in and above
16oz10st and above5ft 4in and above
18oz11st 4lbs and above5ft 4in and above
Almost all glove types come in a wide range of sizes, so no matter what you’re looking for, you should find something suitable. If you fall between sizes, we suggest you picker the heavier one, as it will further improve your strength.
What materials should I look for?
Leather is far more durable than synthetic materials, and it will better mould to the shape of your hands. However, leather gloves cost more than polyurethane and other imitation materials. Our recommendations below include both leather and synthetic gloves, selected on the basis of their quality and lifespan.
Check the fastenings, too. The traditional laced design keeps your gloves securely on, but you’ll need someone to help you in and out of them. It’s probably for this reason that the majority of gloves these days – including our recommendations below – have velcro straps.
How much should I spend?
For a first pair, we’d suggest you don’t go lower than £25; you’ll find options out there for as little as £10, but these tend to be poorly made using cheap vinyl, and are likely to wear out after a few rounds. If you want a pair of quality leather gloves, you’re looking at around £60 to £100 – although as with most sports equipment, prices can go a lot higher than this as you move toward the professional area.
READ NEXT: Best gym headphones

The best boxing gloves you can buy

Everlast Pro Style: The best boxing gloves for beginners 

Price: From £21 | Buy now from Amazon
Everlast is one of boxing’s premier brands: you’ll see plenty of world-class boxers, past and present, with the name emblazoned across their wrists. While these low-cost gloves are aimed at beginners, that pedigree of quality is still on display. They feature a mesh fabric across their palms, which lets your hands breathe while inside them, and velcro straps to fix them in place. They come black, blue, red and white variants, and a wide range of sizes. While the polyurethane construction isn’t as durable as leather, this is still a reliable pair of gloves that will last you until you’re ready to upgrade.
Key specs – Sizes: 8-16oz; Material: Imitation leather; Best for: Training

Venum Elite: Best boxing gloves for training 

Price: From £55 | Buy now from Amazon
These training gloves from Venum are made in Thailand – which in the boxing world is a good indicator of quality. A mesh panel in the palms prevents your hands from getting too hot and icky, while a triple-foam design offers excellent shock absorbency (the last thing you want when landing a blow is to injure your own hand). With their snarling snake logo and brash lettering, these are hardly subtle aesthetically, but they come in a wide range of colours for you to pick from.
Key specs – Sizes: 8-16oz; Material: Skintex leather; Best for: Training

RDX Ego: Best-value fighting gloves

Price: From £22 | Buy now from Amazon
The price may seem exceptionally low for a pair of gloves made from “maya hide leather” – but the Ego’s sneaky secret is that this is a synthetic material that isn’t as tough as real leather. Even so, they’re a solid pair of low-cost fighting gloves. The palms are perforated by a series of dots to keep your hands as cool as possible, and the “Quadro-Dome” technology – three layers of padding with gel sheets in-between – gives great impact protection. They also have an adjustable wrist component, to give extra support.
Key specs - Sizes: 8-16oz; Material: Maya hide leather; Best for: Fighting/Competition

Sandee Authentic Gloves: Best boxing gloves for fighting

Price: From £58 | Buy now from Amazon
Thailand-based Sandee has been making boxing equipment for over 30 years, and its heritage shows in the finesse of these hand-stitched gloves, whose black-and-white design is a touch more tasteful than most rivals. All the features you’d hope for are here, including breathable palms, easy-open velcro wrist straps and tri-foam shock capacity. But perhaps the most remarkable thing about these gloves is their price – for a high-quality pair of real leather gloves, they’re a steal.
Key specs – Sizes: 10-16oz; Material: Cowhide leather; Best for: Fighting

Everlast Heavy: Best budget bag gloves

Price: £20 | Buy now from Amazon
Designed exclusively for bag work, these gloves come in just one size, with elastic strapping which makes them easy to slip on or off. They’re made of neoprene, which will let your hands breathe, while an anti-microbial treatment prevents unpleasant smells and bacterial growths. The single size means they may not be suitable for boxers with particularly small or large hands, but for most people focusing on bag work they’re a great affordable shout.
Key specs – Size: Universal; Material: Neoprene; Best for: Bag work

Fairtex Black Cross-Trainer: Best enthusiast bag gloves

Price: £59 | Buy now from Olympia
Yet another Thai company, Fairtex has put together an excellent pair of gloves for heavy bag work. They’re made of premium leather, so they’ll survive quite a few sessions, and they feature a separate thumb component to reduce the risk of injury by snagging your thumb. Like the Everlast bag gloves, they’re only available in one size, and at 2kg they’re probably too cumbersome for sparring or mitt work. For giving that bag a good pummelling, however, they’re a fantastic choice.
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Honor Magic 2 review: A nostalgic sliding phone with ultra-modern internals – and no notch

Our Rating 
Price when reviewed 
579
inc VAT
The Magic 2’s clever sliding mechanism eliminates the display notch
Pros 
Retro sliding mechanism
Superb performance
Impressive battery life
Cons 
No official UK supplier
No water-resistance, nor headphone jack
Uninspiring camera
The Honor Magic 2 brings back the good old vibes of sliding phones. But it’s not just about a retro feel: the slide mechanism is used to hide and uncover the front-facing cameras, allowing the display to take up the full front face of the phone with no notch. It’s certainly a different take to the Vivo Nex S smartphone, which stows its front-facing camera in a motorised pop-up module.

Honor Magic 2 review: What you need to know

The Honor Magic 2 qualifies in all respects as a flagship Android smartphone. Its Kirin 980 CPU is, at the time of writing, the fastest processor you’ll find on an Android smartphone, and it’s backed up with plenty of memory and storage space. It’s well equipped as a snapper too, with three rear- and two front-facing cameras.
There are some caveats, however. It’s hard to find in the UK, it lacks water resistance and there’s no 3.5mm audio jack. What’s more, the distinctive slider is only used for answering calls, accessing the forward cameras – and opening a Chinese voice assistant. There’s definitely room for improvement.

Honor Magic 2 review: Price and competition

The Magic 2 hasn’t been officially released in the UK, so the most practical way to get one is via grey import, for around £579. If you want a sliding mechanism though there’s nothing to compete with it. The closest rival is probably the £533 Vivo Nex S, with its motorised pop-up selfie camera.
Another phone using the same blisteringly fast Kirin 980 processor is the Huawei Mate 20 Pro at £900; alternatively, Qualcomm’s flagship processor, the Snapdragon 845, is found in the the LG G7Samsung Galaxy S9 and the OnePlus 6T among others, at prices starting from around £500.

Honor Magic 2 review: Design and build quality

The Magic 2 looks very elegant. The gradient-coloured rear glass of the phone is to be admired, and its edge-to-edge display has no ugly notch to hinder the viewing experience. As we’ve mentioned, that’s because the front-facing camera is hidden away behind the sliding mechanism; it’s ingenious as well as nostalgic, and it additionally ensures that rogue apps can’t spy on you when the phone’s not in use.
You can also use the slide mechanism to answer incoming calls, just like on a 90s phone, and if you use facial recognition to unlock your phone, it’s effectively slide-to-unlock. On top of this, the slider gives you quick access to the Chinese smart assistant YoYo; as you can imagine, this is rather pointless for people who don’t speak Chinese.
While the slider is satisfying to use, it would be great to see a firmware update add some extra capabilities, such as opening the camera app in selfie mode or launching apps like Instagram or Snapchat. I’d also really like to be able to end calls by closing the slider, which isn’t currently possible.
Other shortcomings include the absence of a 3.5mm headphone jack, and the lack of microSD card expansion – although the included 128GB of internal storage space should suffice for almost everyone. The Magic 2 isn’t water-resistant either, probably thanks to the sliding mechanism. It does, however, have a dual-SIM card slot and NFC capabilities.
There’s also a fingerprint sensor hidden beneath the display. It feels as speedy and accurate as those found in the displays of the Mate 20 Pro and OnePlus 6T, but facial recognition is so slick that this is by far my preferred method of unlocking the Magic 2.

Honor Magic 2 review: Display

The Magic 2 has a 6.39in display with a resolution of 1,080 x 2,340 and – thanks to its AMOLED technology – an effectively perfect contrast ratio. Viewing angles and colour performance are spectacular, with the screen covering a near-perfect 99.8% of the sRGB colour gamut and an impressive 94.9% of the DCI P3 colour space. It’s ideal for gaming, movies and viewing pictures.
It isn’t the brightest display, however: I measured a maximum brightness of 426cd/m² with standard settings, and a peak of 471cd/m² with auto brightness enabled. That’s fine for everyday use, but some way behind the Samsung Galaxy S9’s HDR screen, which achieves a peak of 810cd/m².

Honor Magic 2 review: Performance

The Honor Magic 2 is built around the Kirin 980, which is the fastest processor you’ll find in any current Android phone. Coupled with Android 9 and 8GB of RAM, that allows it to fly through intensive tasks. It’s faster than any phone based on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor, and is beaten only by the Mate 20 Pro, which uses the very same CPU.
^Geekbench 4 benchmark
When it comes to gaming, you can expect class-leading performance. Throw any mobile game at it and the Magic 2 will be able to keep up – and that includes PUBG, which we found initially choppy but which is now rock solid after a recent update. It’s incredibly impressive.
^GFXBench benchmark
The Magic 2 is a winner when it comes to battery life too, outlasting the vast majority of flagship phones. With a run of 18hrs 34mins in the Expert Reviews video rundown test, it’s among the all-time top performers: in its class, only the OnePlus 6T stands in front of it, with 20hrs 52mins.
^Battery life

Honor Magic 2 review: Camera

The Magic 2 carries six cameras in total: three at the front, three at the back. The rear set consists of a primary 16-megapixel f/1.8 camera with phase-detection autofocus, a 16-megapixel sensor with a f/2.2 wide-angle lens and a dedicated 24-megapixel f/1.8 monochrome camera.
You can switch between the various modes – such as HDR or wide-angle – in the camera app, and there’s also a 2x optical zoom that can be activated at the touch of an onscreen button.
^Normal mode on the Magic 2
^Wide-angle mode on the Magic 2
I was particularly impressed by the Magic 2’s wide-angle mode, which captures great detail and delivers a more true-to-life colour tone. As you can see from the above shots, taken seconds apart, the wide-angle version doesn’t oversaturate the buildings nor the horizon, and the finer details aren’t lost either.
Sadly, low-light images suffer from quite visible smearing and image noise. Our test shots came out with shadows around the leaves, noise around the pens and smudges on the bear – all of which vanished when we switched on the flash.
^Low light, 200% crop
^Taken with flash, 200% crop
At the front of the phone there’s a 16-megapixel camera with an f/2.0 lens, supported by two 2-megapixel f/2.4 depth- and face-scanning sensors. These are fine for casual use, but there’s a lack of fine detail, and background blurring looks rather artificial:
^Selfie on Honor Magic 2
In every aspect, the Magic 2 is beaten by the OnePlus 6T, which produces better colour and composition without needing a wide-angle lens. It also takes more detailed, punchier selfies, and gives cleaner, sharper results in low light.
^Honor Magic 2 vs OnePlus 6T: Outdoor comparison
^Honor Magic 2 vs OnePlus 6T: Selfie comparison
^Honor Magic 2 vs OnePlus 6T: Low-light comparison

Honor Magic 2 review: Verdict

The Honor Magic 2 smartphone is a break from the norm. Its design is at once both innovative and nostalgic, cleverly eliminating the notch as it rolls back the years. It’s one of the fastest, longest-lasting Android phones of 2018, and it has a stunning display too.
Don’t forget though that it’s not officially available in the UK, which could have implications for support. It lacks a 3.5mm jack, it’s not water-resistant and the camera isn’t up to the standard we’d expect from a flagship phone. It also feels like the sliding feature has the potential to be a lot more than what it is.
Even so, Honor deserves praise for taking a creative leap, and the end product is one that we’re happy to recommend – although if you don’t demand best-in-class performance, and aren’t interested in the sliding mechanism, you should consider the OnePlus 6T or the water-resistant Samsung Galaxy S9 as potential alternatives.
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