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Charlie Craven's Basic Fly Tying

Charlie Craven's Basic Fly TyingAuthor: Charlie Craven
Publisher: Headwater Books
Category: Book

List Price: $39.95
Buy New: $24.93
as of 9/10/2010 09:56 CDT details
You Save: $15.02 (38%)



New (29) Used (4) from $24.93

Seller: supermoviedeals
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 27 reviews
Sales Rank: 108318

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 264
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.2
Dimensions (in): 11.1 x 8.6 x 1

ISBN: 0979346029
Dewey Decimal Number: 799
EAN: 9780979346026
ASIN: 0979346029

Publication Date: August 30, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9780979346026
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

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Product Description

- Learn to tie 17 popular nymphs, dry flies, and streamers
- Master fundamental tying techniques in a series of practical lessons

Charlie Craven’s Basic Fly Tying is a modern course in fly-tying fundamentals covering the essential tools, materials, and techniques needed to tie a wide range of popular flies. With 1,000 photos, Craven covers cutting-edge techniques for the more tried-and-true classics, such as the Royal Wulff, Adams, and Hare’s Ear, and shares innovative approaches to current patterns such as the Brassie, RS2, and Copper John. With clear, concise text, Craven provides tips and techniques from his over thirty years of tying flies for fly shops on Colorado’s Front Range. This book is built on Craven’s successful fly-tying classes, which start out with simple flies and work toward more complex patterns, all the while teaching techniques and introducing materials by tying popular patterns that catch fish in Eastern and Western streams. This series of lessons show how flies build on one another, enabling readers to tie a wide range of patterns simply by breaking them down into parts. Craven illustrates the progression with his meticulous directions to fingerbusters like Copper Johns, Stimulators, and Humpies. This book, which is sure to become a standard text for basic fly tying, covers 17 flies (including recipes for popular variations), including the Brassie, Black Beauty, RS2, Hare’s Ear, Pheasant Tail, Prince Nymph, Copper John, Woolly Bugger, Elk Hair Caddis, Stimulator, Adams, Rusty Spinner, Parachute Blue-Winged Olive, X Comparadun, Royal Wulff, Humpy, and Goddard Caddis.




Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 27



5 out of 5 stars A Great Book   August 24, 2010
Kyle Cauthron (Denver, CO)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

If you are looking for a book on beginning tying, look no further. I second all the other praise this book has received (for the pictures, the easy-to-follow steps, the tips missing in other books, and the massive proportions at a glance pictures). Two points I would add:

- All the patterns in this book are ones that either are or should be in your fly box. I fish in the Rockies, and I already use all of these patterns . I have always hated having to buy materials to tie some fly I knew I would never, ever fish just to learn a technique. Not so with this book - at least not if you fish in the Mountain West.

- The book is fun to read. The author has a sly sense of humor, which works its way into the text from time to time.

One sentence early in the book sticks out in my head. The author warns against over-dubbing and says he once kept track and tied over 500 dozen size 20 RS2s from a single pack of Antron. That made me pause: 500 dozen size 20 RS2s, and he had tied so many of them already he decided to see how many he got out of a single packet of material. Perhaps that experience is unremarkable for a commercial tyer, but it is clear the author knows his subject.

In short, this is an excellent book: thoughtful, clear, precise. It is a great book for learning to tie.



5 out of 5 stars Become a professional fly tyer overnight!   August 14, 2010
Fishinfool
I have several fly tying books, but this by far is the best fly tying book on earth! The details provided in this book are like sitting in a class with Charlie Craven as the professor. You will definitely become a better, faster tyer.


5 out of 5 stars Charlie Craven's Basic Fly Tying   July 3, 2010
Bob Foster
This is an excellent book for not only a beginner but also experienced tiers. I have been a tier for over fifty years and I have over eighty fly tying books in my library. Charlie Craven's Basic Fly Tying is one of the best. I also have been a fly tying instructor and will recommend this book to my students.


5 out of 5 stars great book for beginner or advanced fly tyer   June 8, 2010
D. Mosnik (Colorado)
Charlie Craven's "Basic Fly Tying" is a great addition to any fly tyer's book collection. Charlie does a great job of breaking down the steps to tie a variety of fishing flies. His selection of patterns is very appropriate for today's angler. Each fly provides the tyer with a different set of basic tying steps that will improve tying techniques. The photography and tying instructions are excellent. I highly recommend purchasing Charlie's book.


5 out of 5 stars One of the Best for Beginners   May 12, 2010
Steve Graves (Washington, D.C.)
There is no dearth of excellent fly tying books for beginners. "The Benchside Introduction to Fly Tying [Spiral-bound] by Ted Leeson and Jim Schollmeyer; David Hughes "Trout Flies: The Tyer's Reference"; Rosenbauer's "The Orvis Fly Tying Guide are my staples. Craven's book has earned a place in my "go-to" library.

His photo's are glorious and the large illustrations of proportions are simply the best. His instructions are detailed enough for beginners yet he includes production tips that can make life easier for more experienced fly tyers.

One gripe. There are many ways of tying even standard patterns. Craven sometimes belittles methods used by others and doesn't appreciate the fact that some his methods aren't necessarily better, they're just different.

I frequently will look at several videos or printed methods and more often than not, combine different tricks and approaches from different tyers when I tie the pattern. This is called personalization and all tyers will adopt methods as they grow and gain experience. Othewise, they are just cooking by recipie.

I will hasten to add that Charlie justifies most of his opinions and I am convinced that his approaches are better than most, most of the time. In particular, his approach to tying parachutes is paricularly effective.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 27


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