Finally, a topic I can actually contribute to...
I was on a similar search not too long ago and ended up with the ArborTech AT950 glove. You can get them in the US from Baily's. They have protection similar to your chaps on the back of both hands, a velcro wrist closure and decent (fake?) leather palms that provide decent anti-vibe and grip.
They're not cheap, so as soon as the saw stops and the cleanup/stacking begins, these come off in favor of garden-variety leather gloves.
Baily's only stocks Large and Extra-large, so if you don't have big burly mitts you may have to find a European vendor who has Mediums.
Anyway, they seem to be decent gloves--if you can tolerate the crappy purple color!
Couple points I'd make about gloves:
1. If they have to be chainsaw-resistant, you're doing something horribly wrong, or fending off some Ninja-chainsaw warrior.
Better work on the two-hand grip, period, unless you're a golfer and want to visit the ER nurses.
2. If you need better A/V, seriously consider trading for Husqy, Dolmar, or PoulanPro, a saw with really good A/V. Hear that, Stihl?
Up to a point you might get by with foam handlebar tape on the front handle. (Works great on my antique Echo.)
3. Atlas gloves with latex palm grip so well with so little force applied by you, that they minimize effect of vibes. No way will leather grip like that. Leather doesn't fare well after a session in a washing machine, either.
4. As many others have remarked here, the latex Atlas gloves wear way better than leather for firewooding. Lots of folks have experienced leather gloves with ventilated fingers. Not the hot setup in mid-winter. Or accidental bird-flips.