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On Mar 29, 2:36 pm, wrote:
IMO, get a Thompson "A," an enclosed bobbin, GOOD scissors, a bodkin, some hemostats, and a scalpel. Lest this gem of advice get lost in the info about other materials, tutorials, & other - rdean highlighted my favorite advice: GOOD SCISSORS. When you hit the fly shop, you'll be shocked at what these things cost; but there are few things better to have than good, sharp scissors; and few things more frustrating than dull, cheap ones. I'd rather have a cheap vise and good scissors than the reverse. (And instead of (or until) a scalpel, a single edge razor blade will do just fine.) Joe F. |
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On 29 Mar 2007 11:44:28 -0700, "rb608" wrote:
On Mar 29, 2:36 pm, wrote: IMO, get a Thompson "A," an enclosed bobbin, GOOD scissors, a bodkin, some hemostats, and a scalpel. Lest this gem of advice get lost in the info about other materials, tutorials, & other - rdean highlighted my favorite advice: GOOD SCISSORS. When you hit the fly shop, you'll be shocked at what these things cost; but there are few things better to have than good, sharp scissors; and few things more frustrating than dull, cheap ones. I'd rather have a cheap vise and good scissors than the reverse. And don't use 'em for ANYTHING but tying. Trust me on this, and fight the temptation. (And instead of (or until) a scalpel, a single edge razor blade will do just fine.) The razor blade will work, of course. I have what I feel are important reasons for a scalpel, though: first, the relatively large handle and small blade are safer around a bench. A loose blade can get mixed up in or otherwise in a place where it probably ought not to be a lot easier than a scalpel, IMO/IME. And the handle also helps with control and, um, "odd" usage techniques - for example, you can hold the scalpel in your teeth...OTOH, picture if you will Frank holding a razor blade in his teeth...plastic surgeons all over the area and several surrounding states would be buying new Porsches, just on the off chance, and J & J stock would jump 12%... Seriously, there are all sorts of sources for "retired" medical scalpels (and hemos, too) or simply buy a, um, not-quite-surgical-grade set (IOW, a KPOS scalpel set). Or an Xacto "hobby chest" is a handy set for all sorts of things - three handles, small, medium, and large and an assortment of blades. I personally don't like Xactos with the pointed "wedge" blade for general use (although for some things, they are just the ticket), but the "hobby chest" has, or used to have, what looked like a small scalpel blade on a small-handle Xacto type base in the blade assortment. TC, R Joe F. |
#3
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![]() "rb608" wrote tutorials, & other - rdean highlighted my favorite advice: GOOD SCISSORS. When you hit the fly shop, you'll be shocked at what these things cost; but there are few things better to have than good, sharp Absolutely ... cheap = worthless .... get the best and treat them like you paid as much for them as,.. well ... you'lll have to. |
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