Showing posts with label mould. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mould. Show all posts
Sunday, 31 May 2015
Wednesday, 30 October 2013
Making Simple Soft Plastic Fishing Worms
It is all over the film is uploaded it seems to run ok,
there are fifty things I would like to change about it but I want to go fishing
so much it hurts. Someone on video course I am attending asked me what I do as
a job, one day I would like to say fish.
Labels:
baits,
fishing lures,
fishing tackle,
how to,
make,
making,
mold,
mould,
pouring,
rtv,
sculpey,
shaping,
silicone,
soft plastic,
worms
Saturday, 5 October 2013
Sushi Whip Tail Grub Molds / Moulds For Sale
In an attempt to pay for some much needed video equipment I am
offering some Sushi Whip Tail Grub moulds for sale at £10 each plus postage.
These are cast by me using high quality RTV silicone from my master, they take
a day to cure and then a day later I give a test, if everything is ok I put in
the post. Recently I have done very
well fishing with this grub on small jig heads, the body being just a little
over half instead of fully round means the hook can be left to stand really
proud, which seems to have helped hooking bony mouthed fish like the pike and
the odd very greedy little perch.
The grubs from the mould are 85mm (3 ¼” approx) long, the
tails come out thicker than injected bait moulds which gives them a nice pulse
that draws fish out even in the mucky ponds and canals I fish. If you are
interested send me an email to paupadam@aol.com
unfortunately I can only deal with paypal users.
Thanks
Labels:
fishing lures,
fishing tackle,
grub,
gummy,
handmade,
lure making,
lures,
mold,
mould,
perch,
pike,
pvc,
rtv silicone,
soft bait,
soft plastic,
sushi,
whip tail
Sunday, 18 November 2012
Thank You Mr Bettell
Image Above: Pike on a homemade jig head
Image Below Right: Polyurethane jig heads and spinner bait (note the missing point on the last jig)
Image Bottom: Bungee sacrificed in the pursuit of pike
Blanking once is bad enough but to blank twice in a row is a
bit of a confidence breaker and when it’s your own lures on the end of the
line, well it doesn’t get any worse. I have a list of familiar doubts for these
occasions but with pike I take comfort in the fact that I have only been fishing
for this species since February this year a little less than tenth months. My previous
pike experience was a couple of fishing trips to a gravel pit about five years ago;
even then I was fishing with homemade lures and enjoyed some success. I still have a lot to learn and winter is
proving to be a harder master than I anticipated.
I
suppose things have slowed down and I have still been fishing as if the sun was
still cracking the flags. Pike like most fish get a bit lethargic in the cold
and without that extra kick of solar energy heating things up chasing down every
plug that rattles past them can not only be costly but just plain impossible. Most of my lures require some speed to create
action or in the case of floating/diving lures to dive down to the fish.
Slowing things down requires something else; a lure that has action, depth and
moves slowly enough to annoy the pike for a little longer. Looking for a bit of
inspiration I turned to the late Charlie Bettell’s book entitled, ‘The Art of
Lure Fishing’. Amongst the anecdotes and fisherman’s tales he gives some sound
advice on using lures that run a little slower and deeper like spoons trailed behind
weights, spinner baits and jig heads (my current favourite).
So last night I got the polyurethane resin out again and
cast half a dozen jig heads from some recent moulds I had made. Taking Mr
Bettell’s advice I knocked up my first spinner bait with a blade cut from a
scrap copper fire surround. To dress the jigs I got the feathers and flash out,
added some brass jingle bells (nearly Christmas) before butchering a bungee elastic
to make rubber skirts. Finishing touches came by way of my sister who is helping
to sort out a friend’s fashion design studio by getting rid of off-cuts. I managed
to retrieve to pieces of stretchy fabric one with a glow in the dark coating
and another with fine silver scales, these had come from an outfit she made for
a guest on ‘Top Of The Pops’ ; a television program I watched almost religiously
until its demise.
It was a cold start at the lake but the spinner bait was a revelation
the blade turned even on the slowest of retrieves and as it pulsed the feathered
tail gave a mesmeric wiggle. Following Mr Bettell’s instruction I bounced it off
the bottom and as if by magic its design kept it almost snag free. I worked the
lake but nothing was in the mood and not having brought my wellingtons I didn't fancy
dampening my feet to get over to the island and the sunlit shallows to see if
anything had come to warm up. I went through all my jig heads giving each a try
and retrieving them in slow bounces until I had an almost mental picture of the
bottom of the lake. Finally I pulled out my bungee corded friend and sent it
across the lake. Within a few casts I had hooked a jack and despite the cold it
set off at a pace for a patch of shallow water a little further down the lake. I was just about to jump into the shallows
when I remembered my lack of boots and quickly walked the fish to a place I where
the bank was low enough for me to unhook it while it was still in the
water. As if to pour scorn on my lethargic
pike theory it bolted like a torpedo.
I moved further up the lake and within five minutes was into
something a little larger that set my drag ticking like a bomb. On my knees at
the bank I reached down to turn the hook again and release the fish without
lifting her but the barb wasn't going to come back through so I got the snips out closed my eyes and let
the point and barb ping over my head. I felt a momentary pang of disappointment
realising that was the end of my jig but feeling the pike surge out from my
gentle tail pulls more than made up for it.
Labels:
bait,
charlie bettell,
cold,
fish,
fishing,
handmade,
head,
homemade,
jig,
jigs,
lure,
lures,
mould,
pike,
polyurethane,
resin,
spinner,
spinner bait,
water,
winter
Monday, 2 January 2012
Christmas Decorations
Image Above: Home made lures shaped from polymer clay
Three weeks without holding a fishing rod, I feel like a
recovering addict. Anyway it has not all been wasted I have finally got to
grips with making some prototypes out of polymer clay. After buying a cheap set
of wax shaping tools my sculpting abilities seem to have come on a bit. The main lures above are attempts to capture the look of salmon parr, the white is the original
and the others cast out of latex mould of the same. These are far from finished,
at the moment I am just working on the shape and the swimming action. The final finish
will be airbrush and epoxy with a natural look.
Labels:
airbrush,
epoxy,
fish,
fishing,
latex,
lure,
mould,
polymer clay,
rtv,
salmon parr,
sculpting
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