Realistic Fly Tying - Creating Cased Caddis Flies

Case is made using a tip from
turkey feather quill, burnt with a flame

A heated bodkin is used to burn
a hole for the fish hook

The hook is bent into shape

Thin strips of foam are tyed onto
the hook

Segmenting the foam to create
the abdomen

The legs on this fly are plastic
coated micro-stainless steel wire used in the bead jewelry trade.
I'll try anything once.

Tying the caddis pupa is completed

A lighter flame was quickly touched
on the tips of the legs to melt the plastic away from the wire
core, and coloring was applied to the foam

A few layers of tinted flexible
acrylic varnish and colored markers,
and the pupa is inserted into the turkey quill

He looks feisty to me, and tasty to trout

And another one

A nice little collection of bugs

I enjoy tying these critters

I used rolled papaya bark paper
for the case on this fly,
as well as micro-turf from a model railroad supply shop

A cool looking realistic cased
caddis fly

Another realistic cased caddis,
luckily they don't take long to tye

I deliberately created a window
on the side of the case allowing a view inside
Tying
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