gingerdun wrote:I would offer a friendly quibble with your statement, that you get the same look and feel with split thread that Pete achieved with the Clark block. The conspicuous difference is the tapering. In the large majority of the bodies Pete spun (but not all) he tapered the dubbing to be thinner at the tail. The tapering was often accentuated during the tying with extra wraps of bare thread at the tail— and by a neatly tapered head. Both Jim Leisenring and Pete spoke often about the importance of tapering, and they both left room behind the eye for the head.
My comment was on the structure. The pre-made dubbing brushes have dubbing sandwiched between two strands of silk, then twisted. The split thread as shown does exactly that, sandwich dubbing between two strands of silk, then twist. How could it end up different structure?
With regards to the taper - I can easily do that too and have done on flies I have posted here. What I did not want to do is make the video too complex with nuances like that - it was meant to be a simple to follow, no nonsense video, showing two (one really) no nonsense simple bugs.
"leave room behind the eye for the head".... ah, there we do differ. With a few exceptions I prefer the heads on my flies to be as minimalistic as I can manage
One additional difference in your technique worth noting is that neither Leisenring nor Hidy were known for trimming off the barbs from one side of the hackle as you did in the video. You are not the only one who advocates it, for it has merit, but it definitely was not part of Pete's method.
What I am saying is that one can only make a choice, when a choice is there to be had. I cannot speak for either Jim or Pete, but something as simple as stripping away the barbs on one sidemay perhaps never have entered their tying - or perhaps it did and they decided was not for them. I find it offers me more control over the angle, and at times the distribution of the barbs, especially on sparsely hackled flies.
Wonderful video lesson, especially showing the alternative method of the thorax hackle.
Thanks. It is but a first, a primer if you will - no doubt there will be others to be shot in the series
Cheers,
Hans W