All articles from section
Editorial content tagged with UV-resin, epoxy and LCR's
| Title | Body | Published | Time ago |
|---|---|---|---|
| Steel Shrimp |
Another Nick Thomas fly using bead chain for weight and orientation |
1 year ago | |
| Hitched Hoglouse |
The hoglouse is also known as a sowbug or a cress bug, and is a very common freshwater crustacean. Here’s an easy imitation using an interesting tying technique. |
2 years ago | |
| Stitch-Up Shrimp |
This scud pattern uses a simple sewing technique to add the legs that are a common trait for these widespread crustaceans, which are high in the fish menu in both fresh- and saltwater |
3 years ago | |
| Combover |
The Combover is a generic mayfly nymph imitation. It gets its name from the hairstyle, now thankfully rarely seen. |
3 years ago | |
| Foam Snail |
Snails can be surprisingly high on the trout menu, and a snail imitation can sometimes be a key to success - on stillwaters and ponds in particular. |
8 years ago | |
| Fleye Design |
Bob Popovics can rightfully be called one of the most innovative fly tyers today. And he keeps on sharing new methods in his latest book. |
8 years ago | |
| Speedy |
This small baitfish pattern is named after the childhood nickname of the originator. |
9 years ago | |
| Coxy Streamer |
A simple hairwinged streamer in old school Danish coastal streamer style... with a twist... literally... of copper wire |
9 years ago | |
| Squid Plus Three |
As the year changed from 2014 to 2015, the Danish sea trout community suddenly started buzzing about squid. And I buzzed along and developed Martin's Mundane Squid, soon to become the Squid Plus Three |
10 years ago | |
| One Mallard Shrimp |
As a Baltic sea trout angler you can never get enough shrimp patterns, and this one was tied as a result of access to some really fine mallard feathers. |
12 years ago | |
| Fleye Foils |
These new fish shaped foils from Bob Popovics are really great for making baitfish imitations. They come in several shapes and many sizes, and stick on the side of your flies, ready to be covered with resin. |
13 years ago | |
| Light Curing Resins |
LCR's give you lots of working time and cure when you want them to |
13 years ago | |
| The Welded Phly |
Remember the line from "The Graduate"? |
15 years ago | |
| Coloring Raw Tubes |
"See what you can do with these" said Stuart Anderson, who owns the Canadian Tube Fly Company to Bob Kenly who often goes berserk with tubes and epoxy. And that's exactly what Bob did. He started painting the raw tubes. |
15 years ago | |
| New age epoxy |
Epoxy isn't what it used to be. |
15 years ago | |
| Surf Candy |
Until now The Epoxy Miracle has given me quite a few fish and still is my favorite baitfish imitation. It is perfect under most circumstances. |
19 years ago | |
| DIY Epoxy Rotor |
If you tie flies incorporating epoxy, you will probably have great benefit from a rotating drying rig like this |
20 years ago | |
| Cements and polishes and glues, oh my! |
Why do I need all this junk? |
22 years ago | |
| Bamboo part 6 |
Now that we have our strips of bamboo tapered into sections for our fly rod, the next step is to glue these strips together into whole rod sections. |
23 years ago | |
| Hot melt glue |
Epoxy is out! Hotmelt glue is in! When it comes to tying eggs and MOE blanks, this stuff is the new hot way to do it! Let our own Mad Scientist |
23 years ago | |
| Bob Kenly |
Staff writer Bob Kenly - tube fly meister par excellence |
24 years ago | |
| Chinook in the salt |
The chinook is considered by many to be the prime game fish of the North East Pacific, with only the steelhead challenging that title. |
24 years ago | |
| Sullys Rod Drying Motor |
I don't expect much from a rod drying motor. It should turn smoothly and hold a rod section securely while it turns. Bumps and wobbles and starts and stops are most unwelcome. Sections that come loose and stop turning are definite no-nos. An on-off switch is nice |
25 years ago | |
| The Sabot Fly |
On the surface the job was simple, come up with some pike flies for my friend's teenage son's trip to Canada, something small enough that a teenager can handle and still tempt a pike. |
26 years ago |
