Fortis Eyewear Guides
Fishing Guides, Clothing Systems & Bankside Insight
Real-world knowledge from the bank — covering polarised eyewear, technical clothing, watercraft and the kit that helps you stay focused in changing conditions.
Explore by topic
- Polarizované rybářské sluneční brýle – Lens tints, visibility, spotting tactics and performance in real conditions
- Rybářské oblečení – Layering systems, waterproof performance and bankside comfort
- On the Bank – Session insights, tactics and real-world fishing experiences
- Behind the Brand – Design, innovation and the thinking behind Fortis products
What you’ll learn
- How to choose the right sunglasses for different fishing conditions
- How to build a clothing system that works year-round
- How light, weather and water conditions affect your fishing
- Real insights from experienced anglers and bankside sessions
Explore by topic, discover something new and Podívejte se hlouběji with Fortis Eyewear.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Fortis Eyewear blog about?
The Fortis blog covers fishing sunglasses, clothing systems, bankside tactics and real angling experiences to help you fish more effectively in all conditions.
Are the guides based on real fishing experience?
Yes. All content is built around real bankside use, not just theory, combining technical knowledge with practical angling insight.
What topics does the blog cover?
The blog focuses on sunglasses and visibility, fishing clothing systems, real session insights and behind-the-scenes product development.
Young anglers often learn the magic of fishing by watching fish appear beneath them. Good sunglasses help them see deeper, stay safer and enjoy every session with confidence. Protection comes first A cast that goes wrong, a lead that pings back, a sudden gust of wind. Eyewear that stays put helps protect curious eyes as
Pike and perch reveal themselves in movement. A sideways flash. A shadow pushing water. The flick of a dorsal behind baitfish. Polarised sunglasses help you catch these signs before most anglers even notice them. Glare hides predators where they hunt Predators are masters of camouflage. They use shade, structure and broken water to disappear. Cut
Summer stalking brings high rewards, but you need gear that keeps you mobile, comfortable and ready when the sun dips and the night sets in. This guide shows how to stay agile, fresh and focused from the dawn patrol to the late session. Light base layers for humid mornings As the sun rises and warmth
Cold conditions make the rewards feel bigger, but they also punish bad clothing choices fast. Getting winter layers wrong turns a great session into an early pack-up. Here’s how to stay warm, dry and focused when the temperature drops. Do: Layer with purpose Each layer has a job. Let them do it. A base layer
There’s rain you can shrug off and rain that soaks through everything. Knowing the difference between waterproof and water-resistant gear helps you stay comfortable, focused and ready when the weather turns. Water-resistant: showers and short bursts Water-resistant fabrics shed light rain for a while, then eventually wet out. They’re great for quick moves, summer squalls
You don’t need to spend a fortune to see more when you fish. Good eyewear should feel natural, stay comfortable for long sessions and deliver clear visibility when it matters most. That’s what makes a pair worth wearing, not the price on the label. Lightweight frames for long days From the first cast to pack-down
Have you ever spotted a shape in the margins, only for glare to creep in from the side and ruin the moment? Side shields block those unwanted reflections so your vision stays locked onto the signs that matter. Stray light kills clarity Even with polarised lenses, light slipping in from the edges reduces contrast and
Fly fishing rewards those who see more. Water moves, fish move, light moves. Good polarised sunglasses cut the shifting reflections so you can read seams, track movement and make casts with confidence. When visibility improves, everything else follows. Why moving water needs the right tint On rivers and streams the surface dances constantly. A balanced











