
Para Post Yarn
Para post yarn is is a synthetic, waterproof, and buoyant yarn. It is essential for visible dry flies and creating wings. Learn how para post yarn improves floatation and strike detection.

Para post yarn is is a synthetic, waterproof, and buoyant yarn. It is essential for visible dry flies and creating wings. Learn how para post yarn improves floatation and strike detection.

A guide to fly tying hooks, including sizes, materials, and uses, to help you choose the right hook for every fly pattern.

Learn how flash materials are used in fly tying to add attraction, movement, and realism to flies in different water conditions.

Mop chenille is a soft, thick, and fluffy synthetic material used in fly dressing to create simple but highly effective flies. Originally made from strands of microfiber mops, it is now specifically produced for fly-dressing in a range of sizes and colors.

Fly tying copper wire is essential for ribbing and weighting flies. Discover sizes, uses, and tips for building durable fly patterns.

Rabbit strips (Zonker) are strips of tanned rabbit hide, with the fur still attached, used to create lifelike movement and texture in flies.

Quills are used to create segmented bodies or wings on flies.

In fly dressing, “biots” are the short, stiff fibers used to create tails, wings, bodies, and other features on flies, particularly in nymph patterns.

Hackle feathers are the long, slender feathers found on the neck and back of birds.

In fly dressing, “dubbing” refers to the process of using natural or synthetic fibers (or a blend) to create a body or thorax on a fly.