Finger tab

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A crude finger tab of the split type.
A crude finger tab of the split type.

A finger tab or Archer Tab used in archery is a small leather or synthetic patch that protects an archer's fingers from the bowstring. It is usually strapped to an archer's hand. In summertime, tabs are far more comfortable than gloves. They can also use thicker material. They also are less expensive and easier to fit, and are the normal finger-protection rented with bows.

The tab usually has a retaining loop on the back of the tab that fits over the middle finger, which is simply there to keep the tab on the fingers when the string is loosed. Tabs come in various forms. The simplest is made of a single patch that is placed below the nocking point between the fingers and the string. This style of shooting is called 'Three finger under'. These are most often used in barebow or longbow styles of archery.

A tab worn on the right hand.
A tab worn on the right hand.

More complex tabs have a split about one third down the leading edge so that the fingers can be placed with one finger above and two fingers below the nocking point of the arrow. This style of shooting is called split finger or Mediterranean Draw. The tab may also have a platform that is attached to the back of the tab and forms a flat cover over the top, to give the archer a hard reference point underneath the chin when the string is drawn back. Platform tabs are often used in Olympic or recurve target archery.

The term tab is of uncertain origin, perhaps an alteration of tag (small hanging piece).

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