All articles from section
Editorial content tagged with Strange materials
| Title | Body | Published | Time ago |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pipette Hoppers and Poppers |
Lab equipment flies tied using plastic pipettes. |
1 year ago | |
| Copper Braid |
This type of braid is found in electronics stores, but is a great new addition to the fly tyer’s arsenal of useful copper products |
1 year ago | |
| Fly Couture |
Some tyers tie different flies. Scottish Nick Thomas, now Wales based, is one of them. And he wrote a book about it. |
3 years ago | |
| Discs and cones |
A lot of flies - salmon tube flies in particular – use different discs or cones, and the market is full of them. Here's an overview of some of the many types. |
9 years ago | |
| The Test Tube |
A weird and futuristic construction from the archives. Really easy to tie... eh, make... uhm... construct... Metal, plastic and glue. |
12 years ago | |
| New tube materials |
It's been some years since The Global FlyFisher's huge article series on tube flies started, and a lot of things have happened in the tube materials market. We try to catch up. |
13 years ago | |
| The Killer Mantis |
Who else than epoxy wizard (and madman) Bob Kenly would take on tying... eh, building... eh, constructing a Mantis Shrimp as a fly? Follow the project this article where you can read Bob's story about the fly and see pictures of the process and the finished fly. |
13 years ago | |
| A different tube system |
And I mean really, really different. Really! |
15 years ago | |
| G-String Eyes |
If you play guitar and tie flies...you are wasting some valuable tying material every time you change your strings. Old guitar strings have something to make flies land softly on the water and jig just enough to tease fish into striking. Learn from GFF partner Steve Schweitzer what to keep from old strings and how to tie |
16 years ago | |
| A Pheasant Under Glass |
Two seemingly unrelated events led tube fly tyer par excellence Bob Kenly to this method of tying and to discover a coloring system that I have never tried before: dyed Lady Amherst tail feathers and a note requesting something different to be thrown in the water for salmon in New Foundland. |
17 years ago | |
| Burning Man |
This strange popper came out of Martin Joergensen's vice recently and has already proved its value several times. See why it might be interesting to you, how to tie it (in meticulous details) as well as how it moves - and in video too! And learn why it's called Burning Man. |
18 years ago | |
| The Plipper |
One of the strangest fly-contraptions ever to see daylight from my hands. It's a tube fly. It uses one basic material. It's tied without thread. It's ugly, but it works. It's a popper with a lip - a Plipper. |
19 years ago | |
| The Spade - Green GP feathers |
The fly will probably look like something the cat dragged in, when it's been cast a couple of times. But still: I'll give it a try. I've always loved tying with golden phesant (GP) feathers. |
24 years ago | |
| Gift wrapping string fly |
I have some remote relatives in Boston who occasionally sends over christmas gifts to my kids. This year the gifts were packed with some particularly interesting string. This string was braided in the colors red and green with some shiny material laid in. It said "flies" all over it! I scavenged the remains from the unpacking and stoved it away between my fly tying materials. |
24 years ago | |
| The Flasher |
The Flasher fly is not so much a fly as a method of adding a spinner to any tube fly which under certain circumstances enhances its attractiveness to almost any species of fish. |
27 years ago | |
| The Gladiator |
The Gladiator started as a joke but one with a lot of thought behind its origins. |
28 years ago |
