Shooting Eyewear what you need to know
11th Feb 2025
It has now become mandatory to wear eyewear at CPSA registered shoots and most shooting schools, shooting grounds and even many members' clubs either make it compulsory or strongly advise that eyewear is worn. Shooting sunglasses should be made from plastic – polycarbonate is the material favoured by most sports eyewear manufacturers because it’s impact resistant and shatterproof and provide a very high degree of protection whether from a stray or falling pellet but more likely a shard of broken clay. Unlike glass however, polycarbonate will easily scratch so you do need to take care of the lenses. Good shooting eyewear are ‘sports style’ and quite different from fashion and leisure styles in that they are much more wrap around in other words closer fitting and the frame and lenses will be made of a plastic material like polycarbonate. Sports, wrap-around style sunglasses give plenty of eye protection to keep out wind, rain and harmful UVR; lightweight frames for extended wear and impact resistant lenses. This adds up to performance and protection. Frames will typically also have rubber or silicone nose pads and temple tips to stop them slipping off your face when you’re moving or perspire. A good thing about sports sunglasses is that as they close fitting they tend to fit both men and women and the majority of sports sunglasses are unisex in size and style.
For shooting the main reason for usingsports eyewear is to protect your eyes from either a pellet or piece of clay but a second and very important reason is to provide protection from harmful ultraviolet radiation (UVR), in particular the more-damaging UVB radiation. UV rays from sunlight can damage the retina and the lens of the eye. Too much exposure is linked to conditions like cataracts and age-related macular degeneration. Good quality sunglasses and eyewear should meet the industry standard UV400 rating and will provide the eye with substantial protection against solar UVR– and reducing the amount of UVR that the eye is exposed to over a person's lifetime will be beneficial.
For shooting the main reason for usingsports eyewear is to protect your eyes from either a pellet or piece of clay but a second and very important reason is to provide protection from harmful ultraviolet radiation (UVR), in particular the more-damaging UVB radiation. UV rays from sunlight can damage the retina and the lens of the eye. Too much exposure is linked to conditions like cataracts and age-related macular degeneration. Good quality sunglasses and eyewear should meet the industry standard UV400 rating and will provide the eye with substantial protection against solar UVR– and reducing the amount of UVR that the eye is exposed to over a person's lifetime will be beneficial.