Before shopping and spending that hard earned cash... some things you need to determine.
1. Have someone who knows what they are doing, measure your draw length.
.. Give them a call and talk all of this over if you have the slightest questions. Keep in mind however, that as your strength increases, which it may well do with practice, and as your "form" improves, you may actually gain a bit in draw length..If you order a bow designed to be usable up your your draw length but not much farther... say a 28" draw which you have been measured at, I would opt for the next size up that may allow your draw length to increase to the 29" range. This will save the cost of a longer set of limbs right away.
2. Determine which eye is your "dominate eye"...It's very important when shooting a traditional bow. If you find out after buying a right hand bow as a right hand shooter, that your actually "Left Eye Dominate".
...You could have bought that Left hand bow in the first place... and started to learn, along with train those muscles from the start.. Many guys have eventually found that this is the case for their poor, erratic shooting, and had to change shooting hands and learn those basics over again but from the "Other Side"... this can be expensive. :rolleyes:
3. Find the weight of draw that you can comfortably handle and still maintain some "form", as a new shooter.. You can always buy heavier limbs if your bow is still in production, at a later date as your strength builds. Over-bowing your self "right off of the get go" does nothing for the joy of shooting, improving your form, and accuracy. In many cases this causes a new shooter to lay down a traditonal bow.
You'll be back here with some more questions..
That's perfectly acceptable here and we love to help.
I highly encourage all of these steps before spending a penny.
Gene