Range day clothing: what experienced shooters wear
My first brass burn taught me to button my collar. The second one, down my shirt, taught me to wear tighter necks. The third one, inside my boot, taught me to tuck pants into boots or wear taller socks. Everyone learns eventually. The question is how many burns it takes.
Range clothing isn't complicated, but it's specific. The concerns are different from outdoor work or hunting. Hot brass, weather exposure, shooting positions, and gear compatibility all factor in. Here's what to wear and why.
Avoiding brass burns and hot casing contact
Ejected brass is hot. It will burn you. This happens most often at the neck and arms, where ejected casings bounce off walls, partitions, or other shooters and find gaps in your clothing.
High collars help. A turtleneck or mock neck provides the most protection. A buttoned collar on a standard shirt is next best. V-necks and crew necks leave your neck exposed to brass that bounces down.
Tight necklines matter more than height. Loose, open collars create brass catchers even if they're nominally higher. Anything with a gap between fabric and skin creates a potential burn path.
Long sleeves protect arms. The instinct to roll sleeves in hot weather makes sense until the first casing slides down your forearm. I keep sleeves rolled down and snug at the wrist on the firing line.
The emergency response to hot brass inside clothing is to remain calm, keep the muzzle pointed downrange, make the gun safe, and then deal with the brass. Easier said than done when something's burning you. Wearing appropriate clothing reduces the chance of needing that discipline.
Mobility requirements for various shooting positions
Static standing is the least demanding position for clothing. Prone, kneeling, barricade shooting, and dynamic movement courses ask much more from what you're wearing.
Pants need stretch or articulation for positions other than standing. Trying to drop to prone in rigid pants means either fighting the fabric or compromising the position. Stretch-fabric tactical pants or pants with gusseted crotches allow better range of motion.
Shirts that ride up or restrict arm extension cause problems during rapid presentations and transitions. I prefer shirts that tuck or are long enough to stay in place during movement. Stretchy fabric helps here too.
Belts need to work with holsters if you're drawing from concealment. Flimsy belts sag and shift under holster weight. A purpose-built gun belt maintains position through all shooting positions and movement.
I tested my range wardrobe by running a series of positions at home before discovering that my favorite casual pants don't work for kneeling. Better to find out at home than during a class or competition.
Sun and weather protection at outdoor ranges
Outdoor ranges expose you to weather for extended periods. Unlike hiking, you're mostly stationary. This changes what you need.
Sun protection is mandatory. A baseball cap or boonie hat shades your face. Long sleeves block arm exposure. Sunscreen covers anything that remains exposed. I've seen people badly burned after a full day on an outdoor range in summer.
Wind and temperature variation require layers, especially in transitional seasons. Standing still at a range bay feels colder than moving, so you need more insulation than you might expect for the temperature.
Eye protection is non-negotiable at ranges, but selection matters for conditions. Clear lenses work indoors. Tinted or transitional lenses work outdoors. Polarized lenses can make target observation difficult.
I keep a bag in my truck with range-specific items: sunscreen, lip balm, a light jacket, a hat, and backup eye protection. The conditions at any particular range day are unpredictable enough that having options ready saves grief.
Pocket placement for magazines and accessories
Where you carry reloads and tools affects your range efficiency. Pockets in the wrong position slow you down. Pockets in the right position become an asset.
Front-hip pockets work for magazines if the pocket depth and opening allow quick extraction. Cargo pockets positioned lower on the thigh are harder to reach during shooting positions but work fine for spare tools and items accessed between strings.
Dedicated magazine pouches on a belt are faster than any pocket. But for practice sessions and casual range days, pockets can work if they're designed well. I run pocket-carry reloads when I'm practicing concealed-carry scenarios to train realistically.
Small items like ear plugs, lens cloths, and small tools need secure pockets they won't fall out of. Zippered pockets or button-flap pockets work better than open pockets for these items, especially when you're moving between positions.
I've lost items from pockets during shooting courses more times than I'd like. Now I check pocket security before every session. Anything that can fall out will fall out eventually.
Clothing that works under plate carriers and chest rigs
Training with load-bearing equipment adds clothing requirements. What works on a bare torso doesn't always work under a plate carrier.
Moisture-wicking base layers are essential under plate carriers. The combination of body heat, load, and limited ventilation creates serious sweat. Cotton soaks and stays wet for hours. Synthetics move moisture and dry between training evolutions.
Chafe points develop where straps and plates contact your body. Smooth-surfaced fabrics reduce friction. Seams positioned away from common contact points prevent irritation. I've developed raw spots from shirts with raised seams under carrier straps.
The length and cut of shirts matter for plate carrier wear. A shirt that fits well bare might bunch up or ride out under a carrier. Shirts designed for use under armor account for this with longer cuts and minimal extra material.
I have specific shirts designated for carrier work after learning that my regular range shirts don't work well under load. The separation saves frustration during training days.
Range clothing is a solved problem. Button your collar. Wear long sleeves. Choose stretchy pants. Protect yourself from the sun. Check your pockets. Match your base layers to your load-bearing equipment.
The goal is to remove clothing from the list of things you're thinking about while shooting. Good gear becomes invisible. You focus on the fundamentals, not on whether you're about to get burned.