Fly-Tying Hair & Fur (2024)

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Synthetic Zonker

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Fulling Mill Barred Rabbit Zonkers

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Fulling Mill Rabbit Zonkers

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Fulling Mill Crosscut Rabbit Zonkers

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Fulling Mill Big Game Rabbit Zonkers

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Pine Squirrel Skin Zonkered

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EP Craftfur Brush 3" Wide

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Bling Rabbit Strips

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Polar Fiber Craft Fur

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Elk Hair

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Hare’s Mask w/ Ears

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Arctic Goat Fur

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Elk Hair Bleached Or Dyed

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Coastal Deer Hair

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Synthetic Yak Hair

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EP Foxy Brush 3" Wide

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Calf Body Hair

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Yearling Elk

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Fish Skull Faux Bucktail

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Grizzly Hair 16"

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Barred Zonker Strips

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Magnum Zonker Strips

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Crosscut Rabbit

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FAQS

Basic fly-tying materials include hooks, thread, dubbing, tungsten beads, deer and elk hair, feathers, marabou, hackle, tailing wire, fly wire, head cement, and dubbing wax. Keep in mind that these are your essential starter fly-tying materials to cook up standard recipes for top wet flies, dries, and nymphs. If you’re getting serious about tying flies, you’ll need foam for terrestrial patterns, flash or tinsel, soft hackle, body parts, eyes, floss, and varying thread sizes, colors, and weights.

The best fly-tying thread for smaller flies is 8/0 (eight aught) or 70 denier, and 3/0 (three aught) or 210 denier for larger flies. You’ll find the best-quality fly-tying thread in this collection, whether you’re cooking up tiny midges or larger streamer patterns.

While sewing thread may make affordable and useful practice thread while you’re getting used to the intricacies of fly tying, we do not recommend using it for flies you intend to fish. Sewing thread is not durable enough. It rots quickly and usually breaks away after only a few uses.

The best feathers for fly tying are high-quality, natural-looking feathers that will give your patterns a lifelike look. The type of feather you use depends on the pattern. Flowy ostrich marabou creates movement for effective wet flies, but you’ll want to use buoyant, fluffy cul-de-canard feathers for emergers, dry flies, and nymphs. Similarly, stiffer center tail pheasant feathers work great to dress up salmon or steelhead flies. There are several types of feathers used in fly tying, and each is the best for its specific purpose.

You can use many types of feathers in fly tying, but a “feather is a feather” philosophy won’t work. Feathers are not automatically interchangeable. Specific types of feathers create specific types of looks and movements on a fly, so you can’t achieve the same effect with a blue jay feather you found in the yard as you can with a peaco*ck quill or barred marabou.

Once you know your pattern, you’ll know what hook size you need, which dictates the bead size. The bead size needs to match the hook size, and there are differences between cyclops (countersunk) beads, slotted tungsten beads, and cones. For example, on a #10 hook, you’ll need a 3.3mm countersunk bead but a 4.6mm bead if you’re using slotted tungsten. We keep a hook-to-bead size chart handy because trying to memorize which types of beads go with which types of hooks can be frustrating if you’re tying several different-sized patterns.

For natural materials like feathers and hair, as well as thread, hooks, and beads, you should always purchase your fly-tying materials from a fly shop or fly-tying materials retailer. There can be a great difference in caliber of these materials, and those sold by fly shops are selected for their fly-tying quality. Many fly tyers will recommend going a step further and hand-selecting your materials at a fly shop in person. This way, you know the materials will meet your needs. Synthetic materials can vary in quality too, but tyers are often less choosy about selecting some synthetics. The benefit of buying synthetic materials from a fly shop is that the sizes, colors, flexibility, durability, and other important properties will be pre-selected for use in fly tying.

High-Quality Natural & Synthetic Hair & Fur for Fly Tying

Find the best collection of hair and fur materials for tying lifelike flies at Orvis. Discover premium choices among real animal fur and hair, including prime selections of rabbit, elk hair, goat, and calf, to create irresistible dry and wet flies as well as streamers and zonkers. Our options in high-quality synthetics give fly tyers the lifelike movement they seek as well as a variety of colors to convince even the spookiest of fish. From faux bucktail to real deer belly hair, stock your station with the exact fibers you need to cook up lifelike bass bugs, hoppers, terrestrials, midges, caddis, and mayflies. Our hair and fur fly-tying materials are ideal for creating patterns that target a range of species, and you’ll find fur and brush strips in various sizes for small to large streamer patterns for attracting big gamefish. For the best selection of body and wing fly-tying materials, browse our full Hair & Fur collection.

Fly-Tying Hair & Fur (2024)

FAQs

What is the best hair for tying flies? ›

A good piece of cow elk hair is a fly-tying staple. Cow elk hair is slightly darker and shorter than bull elk hair but also slightly bigger in outside diameter. The texture and color of a good piece of cow elk hair is similar to that of deer body hair, but the wall of the cow elk hair is generally much thicker.

What are the proportions for fly tying? ›

The tail - Should extend to either one or one and a half times the length of the body. The body - Should extend from the base of the wing to a position opposite the hook barb, it should taper towards the tail and should cover two-thirds the length of the hook shank.

Is elk hair better than deer hair for fly tying? ›

Elk hair is much coarser and flares less than deer hair, which gives it good qualities for wings on bigger dries such as salmonfly or green drake imitations. Elk hair is also more durable than deer hair, which makes it good for tails on things like hare's ear nymphs or green drake dries.

What is the best tail material for fly tying? ›

The tail feathers of peaco*ck and pheasant have become a real fly tying classic, which is irreplaceable for many patterns of dry and wet flies. You can not do without these fly tying materials even in the production of modern nymphs. Peaco*ck feathers are the right choice for the creation of red tags and orange tags.

What size thread is best for fly tying? ›

Size 6/0 is always the workhorse thread; we use it for making most of the patterns in our fly boxes: nymphs, freshwater streamers, beefier dry flies, and smaller saltwater patterns. This thread is stronger than size 8/0 so you can apply more tension when lashing materials to hooks.

What is the most common thread for fly tying? ›

Most fly-tying threads are made of nylon or polyester. Polyester is slightly heavier than nylon and has a higher denier for a length of the same diameter. Polyester is also a bit stronger.

What is the best thread for fly tying? ›

For all around tying, use a good 6/0 thread. Our H&H Euro-Thread is the strongest on the market and will make it very easy for you to learn. Even our 8/0 can be manhandled a bit, does not break very easily and is slow to build up because of its thin diameter.

What is super hair in fly tying? ›

Green Chartreuse - Sold out - $6.00. Brown - $6.00. Quantity. Super Hair is a crinkled nylon filament used in many saltwater patterns and some popular freshwater flies.

How do you split a fly tying feather? ›

Splitting Quills
  1. Cut the butts off the dry feathers and break the stems at the tip, but do not separate.
  2. Soak the feather in water that has a drop of ordinary hair conditioner added to it. ...
  3. Hold each side of the feather at the point where it splits and simply pull it apart by pulling down on each side.
Apr 25, 2015

What can you use instead of moose hair for fly tying? ›

If you have some dark calf hair that would work. Deer hair always seems to break off when I have used it for a tail. I think it is too brittle. Other possibilities are squirel tail, ground hog tail, hackle fibers, and microfippets.

What feathers are good for fly tying? ›

Feathers from drake wood ducks, mallards, and green-winged teal are by far the most popular, mostly due to their coloration and abundance. The “lemon” flank feathers from a wood duck are prized for their color and barring.

What is the strongest fly tying thread? ›

Breaking Strength

GSP threads definitely have the highest breaking strengths for their weight and the VEEVUS brand from Denmark has developed threads with very high breaking strengths for their size. We stock dozens of fly tying threads and feature many different brands, including the following: Danville. UNI.

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