Purple Haze Soft Hackle Tutorial
Moderators: William Anderson, letumgo
- letumgo
- Site Admin
- Posts: 13346
- Joined: Sat Feb 21, 2009 7:55 pm
- Location: Buffalo, New York
- Contact:
Purple Haze Soft Hackle Tutorial
Purple Haze Soft Hackle
Hook - Daiichi Model 1740 (Size 12/Wet/Nymph Hook)
Thread - 8/0 UNI-Thread (Purple)
Hackle - Whiting Hen Cape Feather (Natural Black) - Stripped on on side
Rib - Monofilament (Clear/0.004")
Abdomen - One strand of Jaimeson's Spindrift yarn (165 Dusk/aka Tenkara Bum "Purple Haze")
Tail/Dorsal Stripe/Thorax - Six Strands of Pheasant Tail Fibers (Dyed Red)
(The theme of this tutorial is "EVERY WRAP COUNTS". I want to show the "hows and whys" of the construction of this fly, explaining my tying choices along the way. Hopefully someone will find this useful...)
Photo 1: The materials used in this pattern
Photo 2 (Prepared Materials):
Clockwise starting in upper left: Six Pheasant tail fibers (tips evened); Prepared hen hackle (fibers stripped off the right side side); hen hackle (as it comes from the cape); hook; single ply of the yarn.
Photo 3: Close-up view of the yarn used in this pattern
Photo of yarn from Jaimeson's website:
WEBSITE LINK: https://www.jamiesonsofshetland.co.uk/s ... -3-1-c.asp
DETAILED TYING INSTRUCTIONS (and the tying choices behind them)
With this tutorial, I would like to step the reader thru the detailed process of tying this pattern, and discuss each of the tying steps along the way.
Photo 4: Tye in the prepared hackle
Before tying in the hackle, prepare the feather by stripping off the fibers along one side of the feather. In this case, I need to strip off the fibers along the right hand side of the feather (if help tip upwards and glossy side facing you). This ensures that the feather can be wrapped all the way thru the thorax region, without over hackling the body.
When tying in the hackle, I like to tye it in with the hackle fibers starting at the outer edge of the hook eye. There should be roughly 1/8" of bare stem hanging out from the hook. Later on the tying process, this short section of bare hackle stem allows for precise placement of the hackle fibers at the beginning wrap of the body. It also helps to prevent twisting of the feather.
I like to lift the tip of the feather, to put a bend in the stem. Again this helps train the stem, and get the orientation of the feather aligned for wrapping.
Once the feather is tyed in by the stem, I trim it off near the midpoint of the hook shank. This helps add a little material in the abdomen area, which will cause this region to be slightly larger than the rear half of the fly. I do this to help form a slight taper to the body.
Photo 5: Add the mono rib
Tye in the strand of monofilament and wrap back to the midpoint of the hook, just a couple wraps beyond the end of the hackle stem.
Photo 6: Add another layer of thread wraps to the thorax region.
Wrap the tying thread back towards the eye of the hook, in close touching even wraps. Stop the thread, roughly one hook eye length away from the end. This leaves room later for the hackle wraps and head of the fly. It also helps form a slight forward taper at the front of the body.
Photo 7: Tye in the single strand of yarn
Tying in a single ply of yarn, then wrap back to the barb of the hook. Use close touching thread wraps, creating a smooth uniform underbody. Stop wrapping backwards when the thread is even with the barb of the hook.
Photo 8: Wrap thread forward again
Wrap the tying thread forward in close touching turns, stopping one hook-eye distance from eye of hook.
Photo 9: Wrap the yarn forward
Wrap the yarn forward to the eye of the hook. You can slightly adjust tension of the yarn warps, and the overlap of sequential wraps to help augment the taper of the body. Once you get the the front, secure the yarn with two firm wraps and clip off the excess.
Photo 10: Add the pheasant tail fibers
Even the tips of the pheasant tail fibers, and then measure them along the length of the hook. The tail should extend roughly one-half the length of the hook shank. Tye in the fibers on the top of the hook. Leave the butt ends hanging out over the eye of the hook. The tip end pointing out over the bend of the hook.
I learned this method from Skip Morris. He uses in for his "Skip Nymphs" and is very easy and effective way to form the tail and dorsal stripe on a pattern.
Photo 11: Wrap down the thorax region
Wrap the tying thread back to the 1/3rd point of the hook shank. Carefully hold the tips of the pheasant tail fibers, to ensure they stay on the top of the hook. The thread wraps can be fairly gentle, so the tying thread does not cut thru the pheasant tail fibers. Avoid firm wraps, since they could compress the thorax region (undesired) and could damage the fibers.
Photo 12: Secure the pheasant tail fibers in place
Wrap the strand of monofilament once around the hook shank at the back of the body (like it was a tag), then wrap forward in open spiral wraps. Carefully hold the pheasant tail fibers in place, along the top of the hook. The mono wraps can be pulled firmly downwards at each top wrap, which helps create segmentation and bury the rib into the yarn body. In theory, this will make a more durable fishing fly, by protecting the mono rib.
Photo 13: Form the thorax
Wrap the pheasant tail fibers (butt end) back to the tying thread. Secure with one or two firm thread wraps, then clip off the butt ends.
Photo 14: Clip off the butt ends of pheasant hackle fibers
Photo 15: Wrap the hackle
Grasp the tip of the hackle in a rotary hackle pliers, then make two full wraps directly behind the eye of the hook. Then make four open spiral warps back thru the thorax region, stopping at the beginning of the body. Make two firm wraps of thread, to secure the hackle. Then place the blade of your scissors agains the base of the hackle stem. A sharp tug will break off the hackle stem even with the body.
Photo 16: Form the head of the fly
Wrap the tying thread forward with open spiral wraps. Keep the tying thread tight (firm wraps), and gently wiggle back and forth when wrapping forward, The wiggle helps prevent trapping the hackle fibers when wrapping thru the hackle. By wrapping the thread forward (over the hackle stem and pheasant tail fibers underneath), the thread wraps reenforce the thorax and hackle stem.
This method creates a very durable fishing fly. The entire body is reenforced with the rib and the thread counter wraps.
Photo 17: The finished fly
Supplemental Photos / These photos were take with my cell phone, so they are of lower quality.
Tweek the color a bit, and I think this pattern could pass for a decent stonefly imitation. I might flatten the body a bit, by tying the strand of year along both side of the body (fold it back in half when tying in, and hold the strands along each side of the hook shank. Anyway, just another way to adapt the tying techniques to suite what you want to imitate.
This pattern can be easily scaled up/down, and materials/colors changed to create countless variations. I hope you will give these a try, and take them for a swim.
Have fun!!!
Hook - Daiichi Model 1740 (Size 12/Wet/Nymph Hook)
Thread - 8/0 UNI-Thread (Purple)
Hackle - Whiting Hen Cape Feather (Natural Black) - Stripped on on side
Rib - Monofilament (Clear/0.004")
Abdomen - One strand of Jaimeson's Spindrift yarn (165 Dusk/aka Tenkara Bum "Purple Haze")
Tail/Dorsal Stripe/Thorax - Six Strands of Pheasant Tail Fibers (Dyed Red)
(The theme of this tutorial is "EVERY WRAP COUNTS". I want to show the "hows and whys" of the construction of this fly, explaining my tying choices along the way. Hopefully someone will find this useful...)
Photo 1: The materials used in this pattern
Photo 2 (Prepared Materials):
Clockwise starting in upper left: Six Pheasant tail fibers (tips evened); Prepared hen hackle (fibers stripped off the right side side); hen hackle (as it comes from the cape); hook; single ply of the yarn.
Photo 3: Close-up view of the yarn used in this pattern
Photo of yarn from Jaimeson's website:
WEBSITE LINK: https://www.jamiesonsofshetland.co.uk/s ... -3-1-c.asp
DETAILED TYING INSTRUCTIONS (and the tying choices behind them)
With this tutorial, I would like to step the reader thru the detailed process of tying this pattern, and discuss each of the tying steps along the way.
Photo 4: Tye in the prepared hackle
Before tying in the hackle, prepare the feather by stripping off the fibers along one side of the feather. In this case, I need to strip off the fibers along the right hand side of the feather (if help tip upwards and glossy side facing you). This ensures that the feather can be wrapped all the way thru the thorax region, without over hackling the body.
When tying in the hackle, I like to tye it in with the hackle fibers starting at the outer edge of the hook eye. There should be roughly 1/8" of bare stem hanging out from the hook. Later on the tying process, this short section of bare hackle stem allows for precise placement of the hackle fibers at the beginning wrap of the body. It also helps to prevent twisting of the feather.
I like to lift the tip of the feather, to put a bend in the stem. Again this helps train the stem, and get the orientation of the feather aligned for wrapping.
Once the feather is tyed in by the stem, I trim it off near the midpoint of the hook shank. This helps add a little material in the abdomen area, which will cause this region to be slightly larger than the rear half of the fly. I do this to help form a slight taper to the body.
Photo 5: Add the mono rib
Tye in the strand of monofilament and wrap back to the midpoint of the hook, just a couple wraps beyond the end of the hackle stem.
Photo 6: Add another layer of thread wraps to the thorax region.
Wrap the tying thread back towards the eye of the hook, in close touching even wraps. Stop the thread, roughly one hook eye length away from the end. This leaves room later for the hackle wraps and head of the fly. It also helps form a slight forward taper at the front of the body.
Photo 7: Tye in the single strand of yarn
Tying in a single ply of yarn, then wrap back to the barb of the hook. Use close touching thread wraps, creating a smooth uniform underbody. Stop wrapping backwards when the thread is even with the barb of the hook.
Photo 8: Wrap thread forward again
Wrap the tying thread forward in close touching turns, stopping one hook-eye distance from eye of hook.
Photo 9: Wrap the yarn forward
Wrap the yarn forward to the eye of the hook. You can slightly adjust tension of the yarn warps, and the overlap of sequential wraps to help augment the taper of the body. Once you get the the front, secure the yarn with two firm wraps and clip off the excess.
Photo 10: Add the pheasant tail fibers
Even the tips of the pheasant tail fibers, and then measure them along the length of the hook. The tail should extend roughly one-half the length of the hook shank. Tye in the fibers on the top of the hook. Leave the butt ends hanging out over the eye of the hook. The tip end pointing out over the bend of the hook.
I learned this method from Skip Morris. He uses in for his "Skip Nymphs" and is very easy and effective way to form the tail and dorsal stripe on a pattern.
Photo 11: Wrap down the thorax region
Wrap the tying thread back to the 1/3rd point of the hook shank. Carefully hold the tips of the pheasant tail fibers, to ensure they stay on the top of the hook. The thread wraps can be fairly gentle, so the tying thread does not cut thru the pheasant tail fibers. Avoid firm wraps, since they could compress the thorax region (undesired) and could damage the fibers.
Photo 12: Secure the pheasant tail fibers in place
Wrap the strand of monofilament once around the hook shank at the back of the body (like it was a tag), then wrap forward in open spiral wraps. Carefully hold the pheasant tail fibers in place, along the top of the hook. The mono wraps can be pulled firmly downwards at each top wrap, which helps create segmentation and bury the rib into the yarn body. In theory, this will make a more durable fishing fly, by protecting the mono rib.
Photo 13: Form the thorax
Wrap the pheasant tail fibers (butt end) back to the tying thread. Secure with one or two firm thread wraps, then clip off the butt ends.
Photo 14: Clip off the butt ends of pheasant hackle fibers
Photo 15: Wrap the hackle
Grasp the tip of the hackle in a rotary hackle pliers, then make two full wraps directly behind the eye of the hook. Then make four open spiral warps back thru the thorax region, stopping at the beginning of the body. Make two firm wraps of thread, to secure the hackle. Then place the blade of your scissors agains the base of the hackle stem. A sharp tug will break off the hackle stem even with the body.
Photo 16: Form the head of the fly
Wrap the tying thread forward with open spiral wraps. Keep the tying thread tight (firm wraps), and gently wiggle back and forth when wrapping forward, The wiggle helps prevent trapping the hackle fibers when wrapping thru the hackle. By wrapping the thread forward (over the hackle stem and pheasant tail fibers underneath), the thread wraps reenforce the thorax and hackle stem.
This method creates a very durable fishing fly. The entire body is reenforced with the rib and the thread counter wraps.
Photo 17: The finished fly
Supplemental Photos / These photos were take with my cell phone, so they are of lower quality.
Tweek the color a bit, and I think this pattern could pass for a decent stonefly imitation. I might flatten the body a bit, by tying the strand of year along both side of the body (fold it back in half when tying in, and hold the strands along each side of the hook shank. Anyway, just another way to adapt the tying techniques to suite what you want to imitate.
This pattern can be easily scaled up/down, and materials/colors changed to create countless variations. I hope you will give these a try, and take them for a swim.
Have fun!!!
Ray (letumgo)----<°))))))><
http://www.flytyingforum.com/index.php? ... er=letumgo
"The world is perfect. Appreciate the details." - Dean
http://www.flytyingforum.com/index.php? ... er=letumgo
"The world is perfect. Appreciate the details." - Dean
Re: Purple Haze Soft Hackle Tutorial
Ray,
This pattern, and the tying procedures and steps, are beautiful! That purple haze that surrounds the entire materials list is compelling! Purple is also very attractive to fish everywhere! My guess is that, just like the irredesent shine found in peacock herl, all of the purple components come together to give that same shine found in peacock and other, similar stuff! I know it's a completely different color on the spectrum but, fish have always had that attraction to purple and so do I! Well done friend!
Another feature I like is the hackle. Evenly spaced and sparse. No more than three or four turns! I know that many of us have hashed the hackle issue out before but the spaced out method seems to look a bit more real, more like the real McCoy in most cases! Again, well done! Real eye candy for us mortals!
Dougsden
This pattern, and the tying procedures and steps, are beautiful! That purple haze that surrounds the entire materials list is compelling! Purple is also very attractive to fish everywhere! My guess is that, just like the irredesent shine found in peacock herl, all of the purple components come together to give that same shine found in peacock and other, similar stuff! I know it's a completely different color on the spectrum but, fish have always had that attraction to purple and so do I! Well done friend!
Another feature I like is the hackle. Evenly spaced and sparse. No more than three or four turns! I know that many of us have hashed the hackle issue out before but the spaced out method seems to look a bit more real, more like the real McCoy in most cases! Again, well done! Real eye candy for us mortals!
Dougsden
Fish when you can, not when you should! Anything short of this is just a disaster.
Re: Purple Haze Soft Hackle Tutorial
Very well done Ray!
I really like the combination of colors and materials.
Lou
I really like the combination of colors and materials.
Lou
In sport,method is everything.The more the skill the method calls for,the higher it’s yield of emotional stir and satisfaction,the higher it’s place must be in a sportsman’s scale of values. RODERICK HAIG-BROWN
- hankaye
- Posts: 6582
- Joined: Tue Jun 08, 2010 4:59 pm
- Location: Arrey, N.M. aka 32°52'37.63"N, 107°18'54.18"W
Re: Purple Haze Soft Hackle Tutorial
Ray, Howdy;
Just took the time to properly read and view the pix. Can not find
the words to truly do your pictorial "What I did for my summer vacation"
show-n-tell essay but it is the bestest one yet.
hank
Just took the time to properly read and view the pix. Can not find
the words to truly do your pictorial "What I did for my summer vacation"
show-n-tell essay but it is the bestest one yet.
hank
Striving for a less complicated life since 1949...
"Every day I beat my own previous record for number
of consecutive days I've stayed alive." George Carlin
"Every day I beat my own previous record for number
of consecutive days I've stayed alive." George Carlin
Re: Purple Haze Soft Hackle Tutorial
Another fantastic tutorial, thank you.
- Ron Eagle Elk
- Posts: 2818
- Joined: Sun Feb 22, 2009 12:33 am
- Location: Carmel, Maine
Re: Purple Haze Soft Hackle Tutorial
Okay, you had me, Ray. As I was reading along, I was thinking"He forgot to tie in the tail." Then, in the words of Emeril, "BAM!", there it was. Brilliant method. I don't have Purple Haze, but your method will be next on the vise. Like the hook as well.
"A man may smile and bid you hale yet curse you to the devil, but when a good dog wags his tail he is always on the level"
- letumgo
- Site Admin
- Posts: 13346
- Joined: Sat Feb 21, 2009 7:55 pm
- Location: Buffalo, New York
- Contact:
Re: Purple Haze Soft Hackle Tutorial
Ron - It is a little hard to see in the photos, but if you look closely at "Photo 5" you will see a strand of mono tyed in over the back of the hook. The mono rib is wound forward, capturing the pheasant tail fibers along the top of the body of the fly. Forming the tail and segmenting the body in the same process. I believe Skip Morris originated this technique, as part of his "Skip Nymph" series of flies. Simple, and very effective way of forming a two-tone pattern.
Variations of this pattern are endless. Changing size and material colors will allow you to imitate a wide range of insects. Change out the yarn, for dubbing and the flies can easily be scaled to much smaller insects too.
My tutorial is intended to highlight the tying techniques and tying sequence.
Variations of this pattern are endless. Changing size and material colors will allow you to imitate a wide range of insects. Change out the yarn, for dubbing and the flies can easily be scaled to much smaller insects too.
My tutorial is intended to highlight the tying techniques and tying sequence.
Ray (letumgo)----<°))))))><
http://www.flytyingforum.com/index.php? ... er=letumgo
"The world is perfect. Appreciate the details." - Dean
http://www.flytyingforum.com/index.php? ... er=letumgo
"The world is perfect. Appreciate the details." - Dean