Couple of Snipe & Purple

Starling & Olive.

Olive Nymph.

Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
Doug, this series of flies are wrapped yarn bodies rather than true dubbed bodies. Although the yarn could sure be cut for dubbing if you wished. The yarns I sent over in time for the last Roscoe get together were a bit thicker than the ones I have used here. The purple and olive are fairly weak in the twist used to form the yarn strand and seperate fairly easily under tension, the orange used earlier is the pick thus far (and the finest).DOUGSDEN wrote:JEFF,
This wool dubbing is really neat stuff! I like the tight look of the bodies with this dubbing. It makes them look smooth! I have some different wools that you sent over before Roscoe last year and Ray graciously shared. I am headed toward the den soon to look them up and then try them out. Yours look wonderful by the way!
Doug
Ray, of all of them the Snipe & Purples do show a slight taper. Was not intentional- I was just aiming at the simple spider look and trying to show the material more than the fly- but if tying something it might as well be a fishable something.letumgo wrote:Jeff - I was looking at the right hand fly, in the top photo. Now that I study the photo more closely, I see that a hackle fiber is running along parallel to the underside of body, giving the illusion of a tapered body. Fine flies, nonetheless.