Typically in Korean trad archery, the fletchings are glued a little further away from the nocks then on arrows meant for a finger release such that they hardly come into contact with the thumb and index fingers of the drawing hand.
I noticed this in a lot of korean archery videos on youtube and replicated that on my own arrows. Have never had a problem with the fletchings cutting my fingers as there is hardly any contact at all to begin with.
Take a look at this picture for a clearer explanation (be sure to expand the picture fully in your browser by clicking on it) : http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c … on_Kim.jpg
As for the draw, do you mean raising the bow arm for a distance shot vs a straight on shot for shorter distances?
Referencing ymjang007's videos on youtube, he is able to draw to shoulder or even at times 2-3 inches beyond the ear lobe no matter what the shot distance is. Not sure now he achieves that though?
So assuming he has:
1) shorter arms then mine, that just simply means the string hitting his chest sooner? But that doesn't happen in his case.
2) longer arms then mine, that may also mean difficulty drawing way past the ear lobe due to severe stacking past 32-33" (at least in my own limited experience ) but he seems able to do it with complete ease?