Silk Color
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
Silk Color
When using a spinning block what "rule of thumb"dictates what silk color to use?
Rex
Rex
Re: Silk Color
Soft and wet - the only way....
Re: Silk Color
Rex,
How nice it is to hear from you again! How have you been?
Silk color is usually determined by the pattern you wish to create! I have been re-reading Skues and he talks about how important it is to have your silk "harmonize" with the fur that you are using to make the pre-spun bodies which are at the heart of flymph tying! This harmonizing was passed down to Jim Liesenring and then to Pete Hidy! Remember that the silk and dubbing look very different (better actually) when wet than they do dry! It is easy to over do it with the dubbing as it may hide the silk at the core of the body! When you hit it right, the right blend or balance of dubbing to silk, it is a marvelous thing! You won't believe the transformation!
I hope this helps!
Dougsden
P.S. There are actually some recipes for making pre-spun fur bodies for the many flymph patterns out there! They can be found in nearly every pattern recipe in "The Art of Tying the Wet Fly and Fishing the Flymph"!
How nice it is to hear from you again! How have you been?
Silk color is usually determined by the pattern you wish to create! I have been re-reading Skues and he talks about how important it is to have your silk "harmonize" with the fur that you are using to make the pre-spun bodies which are at the heart of flymph tying! This harmonizing was passed down to Jim Liesenring and then to Pete Hidy! Remember that the silk and dubbing look very different (better actually) when wet than they do dry! It is easy to over do it with the dubbing as it may hide the silk at the core of the body! When you hit it right, the right blend or balance of dubbing to silk, it is a marvelous thing! You won't believe the transformation!
I hope this helps!
Dougsden
P.S. There are actually some recipes for making pre-spun fur bodies for the many flymph patterns out there! They can be found in nearly every pattern recipe in "The Art of Tying the Wet Fly and Fishing the Flymph"!
Fish when you can, not when you should! Anything short of this is just a disaster.
Re: Silk Color
Now he tells me...DOUGSDEN wrote: ↑Fri Jan 26, 2024 10:20 pm Rex,
How nice it is to hear from you again! How have you been?
Silk color is usually determined by the pattern you wish to create! I have been re-reading Skues and he talks about how important it is to have your silk "harmonize" with the fur that you are using to make the pre-spun bodies which are at the heart of flymph tying! This harmonizing was passed down to Jim Liesenring and then to Pete Hidy! Remember that the silk and dubbing look very different (better actually) when wet than they do dry! It is easy to over do it with the dubbing as it may hide the silk at the core of the body! When you hit it right, the right blend or balance of dubbing to silk, it is a marvelous thing! You won't believe the transformation!
I hope this helps!
Dougsden
P.S. There are actually some recipes for making pre-spun fur bodies for the many flymph patterns out there! They can be found in nearly every pattern recipe in "The Art of Tying the Wet Fly and Fishing the Flymph"!
For the longest time I was overdubbing my bodies. The silk was getting lost, and I wasn't smart enough to make the connection. Then, one day, I was running low on my dubbing mix and the body I twisted up was very sparse. I wrapped it around a hook anyway. The results were nothing less than an epiphany. Lesson learned.
Harmony. It's all about the harmony.
Re: Silk Color
I also look at bug sites like http://www.troutnut.com/ for the insects I want to mimic.
The great photos there of various stages and similar species give me something to ponder as well as the local bugs I run across.
The great photos there of various stages and similar species give me something to ponder as well as the local bugs I run across.
- Ron Eagle Elk
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Re: Silk Color
I don't remember where I saw it (I'm old, gimme a break), but someone did a nice photo story of silk colors, both wet and dry, and waxed and not waxed. Wish I could remember where that was. Knowing the color shifts helps immensely.
"A man may smile and bid you hale yet curse you to the devil, but when a good dog wags his tail he is always on the level"
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Re: Silk Color
Ray (letumgo)----<°))))))><
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- Ron Eagle Elk
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Re: Silk Color
That's the one. Thank you, Ray. I bookmarked it so I can find it again.letumgo wrote: ↑Sun Jan 28, 2024 5:21 am Ron - Is this the reference you’re referring to?
LINK: viewtopic.php?f=22&t=8416
"A man may smile and bid you hale yet curse you to the devil, but when a good dog wags his tail he is always on the level"