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Hair stackers?
riverman wrote:
snip But just the same, whats the scoop....do most of you advanced tyers use a stacker, or do you do it by hand? I'm by no means an advanced tyer, but I took my tying gear on a fishing trip this past year intending to tie up some comparaduns. I had everything I needed *except* a hair stacker which I'd left at home under a stack of clutter. I may as well have left the whole kit & caboodle at home because without the hair stacker there was not an ice cubes chance in Hades that I could tie a comparadun. Admittedly, I have more thumbs than fingers, but for me a hair stacker is an essential item. -- Ken Fortenberry |
Hair stackers?
"riverman" wrote Get one, things like Sparkle duns are SO much easier to tie nicely with evenly stacked hair ( I often don't stack for downwing caddis type flies, they look better ragged ) I have one with two sized tubes, for big and small amounts of hair ... works just fine ... I never use the bigger tube oh, and, yes, get a hair comb too ..... I laughed and scoffed at these UNTIL I tried one, greatly improves any hair fly to have all the scruff removed and a fine toothed comb is far more efficient than anything else I've heard of |
Hair stackers?
"riverman" wrote Get one, things like Sparkle duns are SO much easier to tie nicely with evenly stacked hair ( I often don't stack for downwing caddis type flies, they look better ragged ) I have one with two sized tubes, for big and small amounts of hair ... works just fine ... I never use the bigger tube oh, and, yes, get a hair comb too ..... I laughed and scoffed at these UNTIL I tried one, greatly improves any hair fly to have all the scruff removed and a fine toothed comb is far more efficient than anything else I've heard of |
Hair stackers?
oh, and, yes, get a hair comb too ..... I laughed and scoffed at these UNTIL I tried one, greatly improves any hair fly to have all the scruff removed and a fine toothed comb is far more efficient than anything else I've heard of Seconded. A hair stacker, (I use the large one 'cause its easier to stuff the **** in there) and a decent mustache brush. Mine is brass for fly tying. Gets rid of all that underfur. I tie alot with deer hair. Deer hair flies and flies that just use a bit of deer hair. Stacked tips or butts, it doesn't matter. A hair stacker is the right tool for the job. Hell, want one? I'll send you one for Xmas. Send me your addy. Bass Pro is just around the corner. -- Frank Reid Reverse email to reply |
Hair stackers?
"riverman" wrote This is really a weak topic for a thread, because if I just go out and buy one and then toss it later, it will represent a much smaller waste of money than most of the things I have in my tying kit. But just the same, whats the scoop....do most of you advanced tyers use a stacker, or do you do it by hand? --riverman Riverman, A hair stacker is worth the money. I have an aluminum two piece hair stacker. The aluminum does not build up a static charge and the two pieces come apart in the middle so you can grab the hair bur the butts and pull them out. Ernie |
Hair stackers?
On Sat, 4 Dec 2004 19:54:36 +0100, "riverman"
wrote: In my beginner days, every single fly tying instruction book I read (that means both of them) had the same 'inside hint' that a hair stacker was not really necessary. One suggested an empty lipstick case, another said you could align the hairs by hand just as easily, with a bit of practice. But now that I'm getting a bit better at tying, I find aligning the hairs a RPITA! I tried a lipstick case, but when I dumped the hairs out, they all fell into disarray again. I think a hair stacker really is a good idea, but I don't know for sure because I've never really used one. This is really a weak topic for a thread, because if I just go out and buy one and then toss it later, it will represent a much smaller waste of money than most of the things I have in my tying kit. But just the same, whats the scoop....do most of you advanced tyers use a stacker, or do you do it by hand? --riverman I used cut down shell casings for years, with wax melted in the bottom to cover up the primer indentations and make a flat bottom for even tips. Bought a real hair stacker last year. Much, much, much more pleasant to use than the homemade ones I used for 25 years previously. Get one. g.c. |
Hair stackers?
On Sat, 4 Dec 2004 19:54:36 +0100, "riverman"
wrote: In my beginner days, every single fly tying instruction book I read (that means both of them) had the same 'inside hint' that a hair stacker was not really necessary. One suggested an empty lipstick case, another said you could align the hairs by hand just as easily, with a bit of practice. But now that I'm getting a bit better at tying, I find aligning the hairs a RPITA! I tried a lipstick case, but when I dumped the hairs out, they all fell into disarray again. I think a hair stacker really is a good idea, but I don't know for sure because I've never really used one. This is really a weak topic for a thread, because if I just go out and buy one and then toss it later, it will represent a much smaller waste of money than most of the things I have in my tying kit. But just the same, whats the scoop....do most of you advanced tyers use a stacker, or do you do it by hand? --riverman I used cut down shell casings for years, with wax melted in the bottom to cover up the primer indentations and make a flat bottom for even tips. Bought a real hair stacker last year. Much, much, much more pleasant to use than the homemade ones I used for 25 years previously. Get one. g.c. |
Hair stackers?
"Frank Reid" moc.deepselbac@diersicnarf wrote in message ... oh, and, yes, get a hair comb too ..... I laughed and scoffed at these UNTIL I tried one, greatly improves any hair fly to have all the scruff removed and a fine toothed comb is far more efficient than anything else I've heard of Seconded. A hair stacker, (I use the large one 'cause its easier to stuff the **** in there) and a decent mustache brush. Mine is brass for fly tying. Gets rid of all that underfur. I tie alot with deer hair. Deer hair flies and flies that just use a bit of deer hair. Stacked tips or butts, it doesn't matter. A hair stacker is the right tool for the job. Hell, want one? I'll send you one for Xmas. Send me your addy. Bass Pro is just around the corner. :-) Thanks for the christmas offer, Frank! I know you're good for it, but getting it to me through the mail would probably not be worth it. I have a fly-tying shopping list a few inches long (hooks, thread, beads, etc), so I'll add the hair stacker on it and do a shop in Johannesburg when I go for christmas break. SWMBO and I are starting out with a week of flyfishing at some trout fishing venue in South Africa (www.kingfishertrout.co.za) then headed off overland to Victoria Falls region and southern Zambia in a rental 4x4 with full-on safari camping gear (http://www.bushlore.com/Campers.asp). Should be an exciting vacation, and I hope to be able to cast to some TigerFish in the Zambezi, some lake species in the Okavango, and of course, some trout in South Africa. Look for a TR when I get back. --riverman |
Hair stackers?
On Sun, 5 Dec 2004 10:32:10 +0100, "riverman" wrote:
SWMBO and I are starting out with a week of flyfishing at some trout fishing venue in South Africa (www.kingfishertrout.co.za) then headed off overland to Victoria Falls region and southern Zambia in a rental 4x4 with full-on safari camping gear (http://www.bushlore.com/Campers.asp). Should be an exciting vacation, and I hope to be able to cast to some TigerFish in the Zambezi, some lake species in the Okavango, and of course, some trout in South Africa. Look for a TR when I get back. Looks like fun Myron. That's the kind of thing my trailer was really made for. g -- Charlie... http://www.chocphoto.com/ - photo galleries http://www.chocphoto.com/roff |
Hair stackers?
On Sun, 5 Dec 2004 10:32:10 +0100, "riverman" wrote:
SWMBO and I are starting out with a week of flyfishing at some trout fishing venue in South Africa (www.kingfishertrout.co.za) then headed off overland to Victoria Falls region and southern Zambia in a rental 4x4 with full-on safari camping gear (http://www.bushlore.com/Campers.asp). Should be an exciting vacation, and I hope to be able to cast to some TigerFish in the Zambezi, some lake species in the Okavango, and of course, some trout in South Africa. Look for a TR when I get back. Looks like fun Myron. That's the kind of thing my trailer was really made for. g -- Charlie... http://www.chocphoto.com/ - photo galleries http://www.chocphoto.com/roff |
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