Got it,
This is the bit I was revering to
With the swappers applying their own materials and thoughts I think
there will be a cadre of new and exciting creations that will cover a
myriad of situations.
I was thinking along the lines of substituting dubbing similar to
Ice-dub were I need to chance colour, blending purposes, etc.
Sorry if I offended but in the end it Jimis' swap
Cheers
Ashley
Ashley, (and swappers)
You are correct. 'Juice bugs' are just a style of fly that I've tied
for 30 years, starting with Swannundaze.
With new materials came new applications- Vinyl, Sof-tex, Jelly-rope,
etc., Now UV as the latest improvement.
The goal is to make a bug that looks 'juicy', that is, it looks like
you can just 'squish it' and the juice will get all over your
fingers. If you have some old Swannundaze, you could use that, or
clear D-rib, or clear Larva-lace, or... I've even used strips of
heavy mono to make a clear shell, and surgical tubing for salt shrimp.
The one goal of any effort would be to create transparency. I don't
like epoxy because of the smell and weight and yellowing and the time
to dry (drying wheels) and the mess and fuss with mixing, the waste,
and...
On the simple side, just a scud rope-dubbed with reflective or
synthetic dubbing, segmented, with a good coat of UV on the top
side will make a juice-bug. Let it cure and pick out some legs and
you'll have a scud like a lot of them look in my box, because that's
just what I did. A 30-second fly to tie and doing a group with the UV
doesn't take long. A second coat of UV and the results are amazing.
A bare hook wrapped with pearl strip and then jelly-roped on the top,
and then soaked with vinyl and then covered on the top with UV looks
really cool- pearlescent-transparent.
The thinned vinyl is to penetrate all your materials and make a solid
fly, allowing the materials below to come to the surface as special
effect colors. Then the UV coat gives transparent depth and allows
all the undercolors to do even more amazing things.
But after a few of these simple ones you may get adventuresome. Using
the juice-bug tutorial as a basis lends for some experimentation.
Nice thing is that everything comes out cool and fishable and gives
you more ideas. So everyone's entries may be a hodge-podge of
experiments gone well. I have a 100 or so in my boxes and have given
away that many. I went back to old boxes and took out discard flies
and treated them with the UV, glitter, and markers, and got some
amazing new fishing flies.
You'll find that markers and glitters are easy to use and give great
results. You may hit on the simplest combo that the fish just can't
resist. For panfish, I would do a pink ice-dub segmented scud with
opal glitter in the UV- just a tad- would be killer. Chuck's pink
panfish producer was rope-dubbed pink ice-dub.
Just remember, it's a fun swap intended to let tiers play with
techniques, especially Jelly-rope and UV goop.
DonO
Hi Jimi,
Concerning the material list, I am sure (I will check tonight)
that an previous email wasn't so strict all the materials.
It was more the style of fly and the email said how people wete
able to experiment.
Ashley
On 25 Aug 2011 15:08, "Jimi AKA Desert Eagle" <j...@hdc-nm.com
<mailto:j...@hdc-nm.com>> wrote:
> Update as of this morning, 3 slots left.
> Jimi
>
> Flies will be; Scuds, nymphs, shrimp or variations of these/
similar aquatic
> insects.
>
> * indicates required material to be in the fly
> # indicates an item that may be substituted if not redily available
>
> Materials:
> *Ice-dub,
> #clear Jelly-rope (on-line),
> *clear head cement,
> *UV Wader repair
> *Pearl strips
> *Mono thread
> Melted mono/bead eyes (if used)
>
> Due date would be Thankgiving.
>
> 15 tiers +/-
>
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