I feel like a shill for mentioning this every time the subject comes up, but I have fairly large hands and couldn't imagine using my Galaxy Note without a flygrip or equivalent. Most of the time I use my phone it's one handed, it would be a nightmare without some kind of anchor so I don't drop it or waste the ability to extend my thumb by having to grip the phone from edge to edge.
Also, I'm not measuring my hand, but in the spirit of the OP I'll say that when I buy gloves, I get a large. Extra large usually isn't much of a stretch either. But I hate to brag...
Also, I'm not measuring my hand, but in the spirit of the OP I'll say that when I buy gloves, I get a large. Extra large usually isn't much of a stretch either. But I hate to brag...
You laugh, but I'm an M size (although some times I may have to purchase a random L piece of clothing) and whenever I visit the States and go shopping I have to purchase S size clothes. They fit me like a glove. Maybe a bit too much depending on the brand (Calvin Klein shirts, IE), but American S size is generally right for me.
Also, is it me or finding nice S sized clothes in stock is hard as fuck in America? It kind of shocks me how much I have to dive until I find something I like. It's like shops only stock M and L in significant quantities.
8 5/16", but my hands are very flexible. I actually have the smallest hands of any guy I know. My index fingers and especially my pinkies are practically nonexistent.
That said, the only correlation between that and the other thing that has any scientific basis is index/ring ratio. There's a huge difference in length between those digits on my hands and my anecdotal evidence supports the theory, I'm happy to say. But I'm also at higher risk of prostate cancer, so there's a price for everything I guess.