The teardrop shape happens naturally when you drag a longfibered dubbing out
of the dispenser.  As the fibers trail off they get lesser snd lesser.  Tie
in these tips and you get a natural teardrop.  Otherwise, just keep pulling
the fibers apart re-matching them until you have tapered density.

DonO


----- Original Message -----
From: "J&A Burbank" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2003 2:35 PM
Subject: [PERPS] Re: [ROPE-DUB] Welcome message #RD-01 1/23/03


> Don,
>   Loud and clear,
>  Working on the technique right now and I think I've got in down finally.
I
> have a size 16 with about 8 segments (I know you can get more but it looks
> good). the only thing I have a hard time with is thetear drop, is there a
> trick to getting the teardrop?
>
> Jim Burbank
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "DonO" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2003 1:02 PM
> Subject: [ROPE-DUB] Welcome message #RD-01 1/23/03
>
>
> > Hi, John, Joyce, and all other 'ropers',  giddeyap lil' doegee!
Welcome!
> >
> > Thanks for joining my first swap.  Splitting the group in 2 seemed to
> please
> > everyone.  Less tying for each.
> >
> > On the topic of dubbing and yarns:
> > Ropes and noodles and spins and twists have been going on for a very
long
> > time.   Twenty years ago I was roping poly-u yarn for hopper bodies.
> This
> > is not what rope-dubbing is about.  Also, almost all linear-fiber
dubbings
> > (and thus yarns) can be tied down and spun-roped and wrapped forward,
> > creating segments.  Lots of people do this- many patterns in the books.
I
> > would not even approach this as a 'new' technique.  But this is not the
> > rope-dub method, either.  When Polly roped his big stone bodies, and
many
> > like him- Dave Whitlock included, he allowed the thread to twist with
the
> > material.  Whether a loop, split strand, or single strand of thread, if
> the
> > thread twists with the dubbing, it's not my technique.  In those
methods,
> > the thread is the limitation of the roping, breaking before the dubbing
> ever
> > gets tight enough to create segments.
> >
> > The important thing to remember in the 'rope-dub' method is that the
> thread,
> > or wire, is a 'platform' on which to rope.  Since the thread or wire
core
> > does not twist with the rope, some variables now come into play.   This
is
> > where the rope-dub shines.  Versus yarns, taper and color variations
come
> > into play, plus the ability to easily vary segment width and body size
in
> > one step.  The ability to change the dub if it doesn't suit you is
> another.
> > Just unwrap, vary the rope, which is not fixed, and re-wrap.
> >
> > So far as I've seen, ANYTHING can be rope-dubbed.   Bob Haerings
'Dubbing
> > from hell' was the toughest, but once I figured it out, the results were
> > well worth the effort.  I'll be sending photos of various roped bodies
> using
> > everything in my possession that can be called a dubbing.  Having one
> > technique that can apply all dubbings to any size fly, bushy or clean,
is
> a
> > real find.  My record so far is 21 segments on a size 28 Mustad shank.
> The
> > exact same method and dubbing will produce a #2 6X stonefly tail.
People
> > were cussing ice-dubbing until I publicised the rope-dub for it, as all
of
> > the previous noodling techniques fell short of shaping any kind of body
> with
> > it.  A clean-segmented ice-dub caddis body can be done in 30 seconds
flat.
> > And you don't have to vary the technique to do it.  And wax, which is
> never
> > used,  would just kill the luster of ice dubbing and many others.
> >
> > Learners should start with a long-fibered dubbing, like SLF or llama.
It
> > ropes easily and shows the segmentation results quickly.  Then move on
to
> > different dubbings, starting with clipped furs and longer synthetics.
> Then
> > finally try short synthetics, which are the toughest to master.  The
nice
> > thing is that once you 'get it', it all becomes so fast and easy.
> >
> > Once you can rope your personal arsenal of dubbings, then experiment.
> Comb
> > the cat or dog and rope the fuzz from the brush.  Rope dryer lint?  Rope
a
> > lock of hair from your head, if you can spare it.  Mix dubbings, adding
> > flash materials like awesome hair scraps.  As your 'final' step, try
> roping
> > on the new tying wires, either as a tag or as your tying thread.
> >
> > This should be a lot of fun.    Any questions?  16 flies each.
> >
> > Again, Welcome ALL!!!
> >
> > DonO
> >
> > PS  When you get this message, please reply 'received #RD-01'
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>

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