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Thanks Martin,
That's the fly I was asking about.
I'll try to get in touch with Jim when I establish a You Tube account.
In the meantime, I Googled CASTS and found several acronyms
relative to autism and Asberger's Syndrome.
"Creative Autism Solution Team" and "Childhood Autism Spectrum Test"
are two examples.

Dennis

perskis,

I'll look into it. For some reason our system seems to dislike your images.
The originals seem fine, but when our site scales them, they get corrupted some way.
What program/system do you use to make them?

Martin

Andrew, in addition to Martin's response, I would also like to add a comment on why it's better to leave the feathers on the skin. Often in tying a fly, you are required to use a left feather and a right feather for tying wings. It is almost impossible to do that with all the feathers detached from the skin and stored in a bag. It would drive a tier insane and take up so much time trying to match them correctly. When I first started tying flies, I did what most tiers do, I bought feathers from a supplier that were randomly thrown into a bag. Not knowing what I know now, I thought that was okay. Then I started to build winged flies and quickly realized how much time I was wasting just trying to match feathers. That's why when you buy capes they are still on the skin. I look at it this way, time and quality are relative. If you tie your own flies, you do it because you get pleasure from building your own flies to use instead of going to the store and buy what they have to offer. If you put the time in, it will be worth it. Thank you for reading my article.

Andrew,

Yes you can, but the feathers are much easier to handle when they are on the skin. If you only need specific feathers - flank, CDC or wing feathers, you can pluck what you need and they will often be fine enough to be used as is. But a whole skin hold so many useful feathers, which can be nice to have.

Personally I find it worth the work to have the feathers "well organized" on the skin rather than stuffed into a bag.

Martin

Martin

Submitted by Andrew Lawrence on

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Can you just pluck the feathers from the skin, and wash the feathers?

Submitted by Brian 1737246308 on

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Great article on preserving. Looking forward to your next article.

[quote:883c5bfe60="Martin Joergensen"]perskis,

I managed to get your pictures to show. It seems that they had some kind of color management in them, and by opening them in Photoshop and stripping that off and saving them again I got them to behave.

Refresh the page, and you should see the flies. very nice flies as I said already!

Martin[/quote:883c5bfe60]

perskis,

I managed to get your pictures to show. It seems that they had some kind of color management in them, and by opening them in Photoshop and stripping that off and saving them again I got them to behave.

Refresh the page, and you should see the flies. very nice flies as I said already!

Martin

Submitted by Martin 1737246308 on

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Rick-I was fishing in Pagosa Springs Colorado last summer using the hopper copper dropper. My guide tied the hopper directly to the leader and then the copper to 4X tippet and the dropper to 5X tippet. I hope I have that correct, the larger tippet first. I see the diagram above has this presentation with the flies on droppers off the leader. I am wondering if you might know he did that. How did he tie the fly and tippet to the next tippet and fly. Hope this makes sense.

Submitted by matt glascock on

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First, let me say how much I appreciate the excellent quality of your videos. You have provided a clear, concise, extremely informative compendium that has been my main resource for technical improvements in my tying. I've seen that, on some patterns, you will use thread to build up the body or provide coloration whereas I will typically use floss on the same pattern. Do you notice any difference in action or durability comparing floss and thread? Again, thanks so much Mr. Misiura. You are a real master and those us who strive to become one appreciate you sharing your skills and expertise with us.

Best,

Matt Glascock

perskis,

I have no idea what happened to your pictures! They look nice enough when you click on them... strange!

Very nice flies by the way. Thanks for posting them.

Martin

Submitted by Steve Hegstrom on

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Can you tell me what is GO2 150D Veevus thread compare to the 0/0 system? Is it equal to 6/0 , 8/0 etc.?
what is 100D and 30 D equal to the threads like Danville or Uni-thread? With these 3 deniers what type would you use to tye dry flies, nymphs etc.. Thank you.

Pete,

Pretty (small) flies...
I'd fish those any day for our local sea runs.
Good job.

Martin

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