1, pointing straight. This fingering method has small finger spacing, no need to stretch (young piano players need to expand moderately), and the hand shape is naturally relaxed. This is the most widely used fingering.
2. Finger piercing. A fingering method that requires the thumb to pass under the second, third and fourth fingers and move the finger position upward.
3. Cross fingering. Contrary to fingering. A fingering method that requires two fingers, or three or four fingers, to cross the big finger and move the finger down.
4. Finger stretching. This fingering is used when the distance between two fingers needs to be expanded because of the fluency of phrases.
5. shrink your fingers. The fingering used when the distance between two fingers needs to be shortened.
6. Homophonic fingering. Play the same sound with different fingers.
7. Finger-pointing. Fingers take turns playing a key in sequence.
8. Implication method (also known as "dumb finger method"). When the range between two notes is wide, a playing method is adopted because the phrase is required to be smooth. It should be noted that the duration of the sound pressed when changing fingers should not be too short.