I'm a very wary user of gloves in the workshop, I will use them sometimes on the machines but if I think there's a high risk of getting caught I take them off. A lot of my work is power-fed through the bandsaw, 4-sided planer and spindle moulder so there isn't much chance of getting caught there, but there are times where I may or may not do things which some would consider dangerous and that's when the gloves come off. I like to wear Maxiflex gloves as they're quite resiliant and a good snug fit, I don't really find I gain any more grip but it does make certain tasks more bearable when handling timber and touching very cold cast iron mid-winter.
A very good friend of mine who I used to work with had a habit of getting clothes caught in machines despite having over a decade of experience. One time he wiped away shavings on a morticer while it was running and passed under the bit with a glove on which happened to get caught and pulled his hand up into the bit which left quite a nice gash on the back of his hand. Another time where he was EXTREMELY lucky, he was routing something while wearing a hoodie with pull strings which hadn't been tucked inside the hoodie and when he lifted the router off the work to move position his cord got inside the router cutting area and was bouncing off the cutter, that was probably one of the scariest things I ever saw first-hand and I still do not know why the cord didn't snatch, divine intervention perhaps?
Another funny time was with my old boss, who had a really manky old sweater full of holes and it was falling apart, one day he was using the surface planer when his sweater trailed across the table into the cutter and the next thing I saw was him standing there with only a collar left around his neck :lol: