All articles from section
Editorial content tagged with How to buy
| Title | Body | Published | Time ago |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buying Saddle Hackle |
Large feather rooster saddles are different beasts. Here are some tips on buying them. |
4 years ago | |
| Buying Fur and Skin |
Some tips on getting your hands on good skin bits |
8 years ago | |
| Buying Marabou |
Even though the marabou is a large African stork and the marabou feathers indeed used to come from this bird, the marabou feathers of today come almost exclusively from turkeys and chickens. |
12 years ago | |
| Buying Soft Hackle |
The soft hackle is supposed to be - as the name implies - soft. Soft hackle can come from many birds. Chickens, gamebirds like partridge, grouse and quail, pheasant and even crows and jackdaws. |
12 years ago | |
| Buying Dry Fly Hackle |
When you buy feathers for hackling dry flies, you essentially have two choices: necks or saddles. Necks used to be the thing to go for, but these days genetic hackle has made up for the difference, and oftentimes saddle hackle will actually be a better and more economical choice. You simply get more feather for your money. |
12 years ago | |
| Buying Bucktail |
Bucktails are a very useful, inexpensive and easily accessible material, which is very useful for people tying larger flies like pike flies and saltwater flies, as well as people tying streamers of all kinds. Bucktails are available in natural colors (white and brown) as well as almost any dyed color you can imagine. |
12 years ago | |
| What to look for when buying... |
This article is about buying fly-tying materials. Lately when I have been shopping I have noticed a large difference in quality - even between materials of the same brand and price. Looking thoroughly can make a big difference. The same product from the same manufacturer at the same price can vary, and knowing what to look for can mean getting good and useful, and not the downright lousy. |
12 years ago | |
| Cutting and buying zonker strips |
I have always been annoyed by most commercially available zonker strips. Most of them are far too large and long haired for my use. 90% of all available strips are cut from rabbit, and in most cases they are both too wide in the skin and too long haired for anything but larger flies. |
13 years ago |
