As the title says, how do you prefer to grip your handguns when shooting in a conventional two-handed stance? As always, pictures are great and more than welcome if you would like to post some of your preferred method. To get the ball rolling, here is mine:
This method is what some call the thumbs forward approach. I apologize for the poor quality of the picture. Basically all this grip consists of is taking the support hand and canting it forward so that your support thumb is inline and parallel to the barrel. As far as the rest of my preferred upper body stance goes, it is somewhere between a "modified" Weaver as some call it and the Isosceles. Basically I stand with a very slight bend at the knees, very slight forward lean towards the target, arms pretty much equally extended and centered on my torso with the sights brought up to eye level (I try to keep from leaning down to the sights). Also, I generally try to keep my head centered with no cant to the side. I'm still an amateur when it comes to handguns, and since I am cross dominant (right hand / left eye dominant) it has taken a lot of trial and error trying to find something that works consistently. Here's a good video that explains this technique a bit: Link
This method is what some call the thumbs forward approach. I apologize for the poor quality of the picture. Basically all this grip consists of is taking the support hand and canting it forward so that your support thumb is inline and parallel to the barrel. As far as the rest of my preferred upper body stance goes, it is somewhere between a "modified" Weaver as some call it and the Isosceles. Basically I stand with a very slight bend at the knees, very slight forward lean towards the target, arms pretty much equally extended and centered on my torso with the sights brought up to eye level (I try to keep from leaning down to the sights). Also, I generally try to keep my head centered with no cant to the side. I'm still an amateur when it comes to handguns, and since I am cross dominant (right hand / left eye dominant) it has taken a lot of trial and error trying to find something that works consistently. Here's a good video that explains this technique a bit: Link