Natural rubber: in some compositions used for medicine and gloves, the allergenic proteins are removed. But don't expect a good resistance to sunlight and ozone pollution from pure natural rubber.
Blend in liquid form: probably not. Most elastomers can't be molten, as they deteriorate instead. Mixing the reactants prior to polymerisation is sometimes possible and done to obtain a copolymer. [Sorry for introducing the wrong term "mix"].
Nitrile makes known copolymers with butadiene and some more, it's rather common among elastomers. Never heard about copolymers with polyurethane, but there are so many rubbers and I know few ones.
My general impressions:
- Thousands of elastomer formulations already exist, you just need to find the existing one fitting your purpose.
- Some companies specialise in selling the proper elastomer (which they don't manufacture). They would tell you which one you need, and what makes the gloves just by touching and sniffing it.
- Producing elastomers is nothing for newcomers. Even making a "blend" (as sellers call it, being it a mixture or a copolymer) looks badly difficult and can be deadly.
- But you might create a company that buys individual elastomers and sells them in a wide catalogue with adequate help for choice. It needs to acquire usage knowledge, not manufacturing skills. I was happy to buy from such companies in the past, even at 100* the kg price, just to have their advice and small amounts. While chemists often know what elastomer they want, mechanical engineers don't.