Interesting thought... but I'm way too impatient to manage that. With beads
of that size, there wouldn't be a chance to use a lock on the string...
which would mean I have to untie/tie it for every fly. Too much time wasted.
And even worse, again for beads of that size... that string would have to be
quite thin and, to tell the truth, way too fiddly for my clumsy fingers (I
would probably spill even more). I'm talking SERIOUS time wasted. To get to
a bead and then secure them again would take longer than tying the fly...
and I'm not a turbo-tier to begin with.

I DO have bead necklaces though (and strings too, by the way), but I only
use them at parties. I use to be very successful when I wear them with short
dresses and deep cleavages. (But having Teresa at home, it's only
catch&release fishing these days.)

/Jester


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DonO
Skickat: den 1 december 2005 16:12
Till: [email protected]
Ämne: Re: [VFB] Lesson


Nick,

That's why I invented bead necklaces.  After i invented beads, I kept
spilling them.  So I stored them on strings to stop that (which worked
fine), little realizing the jewelery potential of what I had done.  It was
Veronica who 1st noticed that they looked good around her neck, with an
evening gown and high heels.

Buggs

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Niclas Runarsson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 3:50 PM
Subject: RE: [VFB] Lesson


Update to my lesson:

WHEN it has happened and you are picking up the beads, don't use tweezers.
It's VERY unpredictable. They call them an "extension to your fingers" and
that is probably a correct description. But there ARE situations where you
need to know by heart the exact length of your fingers... like when you have
dropped a bead in a stack-pack container and are going for the next one. You
need to KNOW that your finger has been lifted out of the container before
you move your hand... or you will find yourself back on square one, swearing
with your container rolling over the table and the beads back in all four
corners of the room.

/Nick (going back down again)


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Niclas Runarsson
Skickat: den 30 november 2005 20:57
Till: [email protected]
Ämne: [VFB] Lesson


Hi tyers... beginners and experienced,

Here I come with a lesson that I learned some 30 minutes ago:

Beads... cool stuff which you can use to lots of things. My girlfriend is a
IOCSF member... which means 'International Order of Cross Stitching
Fanatics'. She's got BILLIONS of these small glass beads... and she is very
supportive to my own addiction, which means that I got a "few" myself. This
type of beads has an advantage to brass beads... they're cheap... you get a
LOT for your money, but since they are so small, your eyes will fool you.
They are so small, so small and they don't look like much when you pour them
up in your stack-pack containers, but believe me... there are quite a number
of them there! Here is where you should think twice, cause someday this will
make a difference... maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow... but someday it
will. Do NOT pour them all up in that stack-pack container. Load it with
around 20 and put the rest aside in some kind of "reserv" storage. You WILL
flip that stack-pack container over someday... and if you had them all
there, you will be shocked when you see how many they actually were. It's
like a cup of coffee. It doesn't look like much in the cup... but it get's
VERY big when it's on the floor. And these beads are even worse. They have
some kind of inner force that makes them repell eachother. You will have
beads in each corner of the room... guaranteed!!

Glass beads... good, cheap, lots of colors to chose from and lots of
different ways to use them. But remember: There is only ONE way to store
them on your tying bench... in SMALL NUMBERS!!

/Nick (returning to the floor to find as many as possible)






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