Rubber gloves under your regular leather/kevlar gloves would work great and also the rubber gloves would not ad a noticable thickness to your regular glove size.....
Just try it before you try and debunk the idea .... it used to work for me on cold winter days and nights in Tennessee
Neoprene dive gloves. Make your hands smell terrible, but warm enough for Minnesota before I moved to warmer territory. Block wind and cold very well and are thin enough to shoot with.
I used to wear "Isotoner" gloves, they were thin enough that you didn't have to cut out the trigger finger. However, whichever glove you choose, consider doing not only some dry fire practice, but run through some speed and tactical reloads just to make sure you can manipulate all the controls with the gloves on. BTW, during a reload, its easy to get a pinch of material from the palm caught in the slide...
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