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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Scale Magazine

I put a couple of these German guys in my Google+ circles after I got a look at one of their 'zine covers in my 'Stream' during my early days on the Google+ Social scene. (love that place!).

Here's the first of several cover images that blew me away.

Sent compliments of Hauke Barz

Something about that cover snuck up on me and sure grabbed my thoughts and attention. Who are these guys? There was just something about it that I identified with.

See that TrebleFly logo? Creativity in it's finest form.

I've subscribed, it's quarterly. Next publication is March 1st, 2012.

Incredible photography, art imagery, international fishing adventures, fish pinups, giveaways, screamin user interface, you name it.

I strongly recommend you subscribe and take a look!

I was lucky enough to win a logo T-shirt (the TrebleFly logo) in one of last summer's contests. Stay tuned for pictures!

Oh yeah, here's a link - Scale Magazine you may have to update Adobe, but its worth the experience.



You'll be back!

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Glow Fish'letoe - excellent prop for 'after dark' angle romance

Foot of fresh snow in Colorado sent me to the Santa's workbench.


Twisted and tied up some seasonal bling for the holiday.

Here's a few pictures.

Glow Fish'letoe - definitely a black tie must for after dark - angle romance.

Fish Creek Spinners Glow Fish'letoe  

Fish Creek Spinners - Glow Fish'letoe a must for after dark
Angle Romance!


Gold and Silver Willow n' Crystal Christmas tree ornaments

Fish Creek Spinners - Christmas Willow's


Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Friday, December 23, 2011

Fish Creek Spinners Most Valuable Players

Since my holiday shopping's complete and all the gifts are wrapped, I had some time to reflect on this year's stats and compile this post on spinner performance based on angler feedback from calls, emails, and pictures.

Each year, certain Fish Creek Spinners are responsible for more customer feedback then others.

A certain model and color returns positive results and more then one Angler in different waters, send me pictures, sometimes with a testimonial (otherwise, I'll make one up.. LOL - just kidding!)

Each weight class or category is represented; Large, Medium and Ultralite. All the spinners get results, these just stood out.

I put a link above each spinner to it's Web store model detail. The detail shows other color choices and for most spinners - the underwater hydrophone recording of the spinner. They're interesting, IMO, check them out. Sorry, no Hula spinner recordings yet.

Starting with the Fish Creek Spinners Large Category, large spinners and larger fish species.

This Green and Gold model wins MVP this year. Green transparent powder coat over nickel beads for a translucent glow. Gold friction discs and a Gold Super Willow blade. Hook Choices available. It's 4 inches in length.

These 1/3oz Metal Armadillo's have been around for three years and they're finally getting noticed. Popular in Montana for large Trout and Washington for Salmon.

1/3oz Metal Armadillos
Fish Creek Spinners F354 1/3oz Green and Gold Metal Armadillo
Although there weren't a lot of sales on the Skirted Hula Spinners, this one performed best in terms of feedback. Two 40+in Tiger Muskies hit this double Colorado bladed black spinner with a black silicon skirt.

The winner this year weighs 1oz - two #7 nickel Colorado blades - black faceted glass and powder coated black nickel bullet body separated by friction discs - black Silicon Starflash Skirt - Stacked #1/0 treble rides low in the skirt.

1oz Hula Spinners,
Fish Creek Spinners F275 1oz Black and Silver Hula Spinner

Here's some fish pictures from the large category spinners.













In the Medium weight category, my current favorite 'go to' trout fishing spinner (and I have a lot to choose from) is this 1/8oz Black and Gold Glass Armadillo. I fish mostly stream, river and wilderness ponds. Ben's in all waters and it's a 'must' for both. Anglers across the country agree. I strongly recommend it this MVP.

Fish Creek Spinners F103 1/8oz Black and Gold Glass Armadillo

The next spinner reaching notoriety is a 1/5oz Metal Armadillo. The smaller brother of the 1/3oz, it's been recognized in Denmark catching sea run trout and also in Colorado rivers on bigger Brown and Rainbow trout. Transparent Powder coated nickel beads with gold friction disc and a #4 Ridged Indiana blade. Noisy spinner, all the colors are producing. 

Fish Creek Spinners F312 Red and Gold 1/5oz Metal Armadillo

Here's a slideshow from the Medium Category spinners.







In the small spinners category, the nitromite keeps coming back year to year as a favorite for stream fishermen. This year it moved into lakes for Crappie as well. It's being requested by retailers based on their angler demand. The MVP is Gold and Fluorescent Green. Weighs 1/12oz. Small but attractive!

Fish Creek Spinners F652 1/12oz Fluor Green and Gold  Nitro Mite

Finally, the double blade Hot Rod is back again. This one in Red and Orange faceted glass separated by gold metal beads. The double blades on this one are a #1 gold willow and a #3 black Swing blade. 


Here's the slideshow of fish caught on the ultralite spinners. 







Always the optimist, it was a good year. We entered new species markets with a splash, got in a sales trip to Wisconsin and Michigan, gave away a lot of spinners through contests, and are still having fun! This blog is in it's tenth month and based on interest and traffic, across the world, we'll keep posting information about our journey and be here next year. 

Stop by and don't be afraid to comment, you might just influence a product design or get your own, like T!.

Tell your friends and fishing buddies about us - Noise on the Line!

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Self-deprecation - Spinner Assortment pictures

I've struggled with taking a decent picture of multiple spinners for years.

The most fundamental and closest to home observation I've had, is that it's tough for 'me' to get a good picture of 'one' spinner, lol, maybe this is a liveware personal problem!

Compounding that -- there's no safety in numbers --

"Yep, it's tough to get a good picture of more then one spinner".

If you check Google Images with a "fishing spinners" search, you'll see the state of the union. Trying to figure out placement and not ending up with colorful "barf on a board" is a challenge.

Blades go 'WHERE Ever', hooks go 'WHERE Ever', and components, well they just tilt and separate.

The death of a thousand cuts - you finally just cross your fingers, hit the elapsed timer and count it out.

Then back at the ranch, doing photo preps and edit, you notice you committed the 'cardinal crime' of spinner photography - massive fingerprint on the highly reflective small gold Indiana blade.

It's true, haha! Funny...Not.

Here's some of my image handiwork on the wall of shame.

I've went through many phases to reach this point of self-deprecation -

The 'Symmetry using Gravity' phase



This phase helped alignment, but introduced the self-portrait in a blade problem.

Quickly moving to the 'Random White Imbalance' phase - both textured and smooth!


Random was easier, but a component misalignment nightmare. White Imbalance, well that just makes me blue..

Need another one on Smooth?


and yet another example - better lighting here.


To conquer 'white imbalance' - I entered the 'Random Board' phase






I've tried props



I've tried organizing - the 'Lineup' phase



I've tried the lineup on prop's - 'Lineup on Prop' phase (lucky horseshoe!)



This one was a real Frankenstein!



See what I mean! The elusive 'Assortment Portrait Problem' persists.

Persistence is a curse.

Here's my 'latest' phase.

It's new, so I'm yet to decide on its name.

I may call it the 'Marble Corral' (textured base) provides friction and helps with hook angles.

It could also be 'Spinners in Stanchions', using tools to align components.

Anyways, it uses organization and symmetry (table rows and columns) on a textured white base.

Each spinners unique temperament is established by it's individual stance and balance - that cute 'alligator clip assisted' casual lean. LOL!

po

Here's an 'artsy' yet confusing modification of that theme, using image rotation.


The quest - it continues!

Feel free to comment if you see something that has an appeal.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Bigger Armadillo's in Glass

Just finished out early production on the 1/4oz Glass Armadillo's. Had about 5 colors out for testing. Now we'll have more choices.

These are the biggest glass Armadillos so far at 1/4oz and 4inches in length. I've been calling them the Steelhead Armadillo's. Their metal cousin has been doing great on larger Salmon.

Few of my favorites. Check out the reflection on the undersides of these #5 Ridged Indiana Blades! Once that blade starts spinning, so do the faceted glass beads.

Spinners are resting on a piece of Colorado Marble I found hidding in the bushes while visiting the Mine in Marble Colorado. Same mine's marble that's in the Lincoln Memorial and other Washington D.C. monuments (per the mine information podium).




Here's a Picasa Slideshow of all the model's colors

1/4oz Glass Armadillo's

Also a link to the web store

Fish Creek Spinners 1/4oz Glass Armadillo's in Webstore

Thursday, December 15, 2011

New larger Spinner - 1/2oz Dbl Blade Bullet

Just finished launching a new 1/2oz spinner in the web store.

It weighs 1/2oz - comes in 12 colors - and can be purchased without a hook! Many anglers fish waters where hook restrictions vary by body of water. You can choose the #4 treble hook, a split ring, or a duo lock swivel to be attached to the spinners wire.

The double Super Willows are sweet blades. A #4 Gold rides tandem above a #5 Nickel blade. Noisy and lots of strobe. The top friction disc collides with the blade which results in wobble and clacking noise against the faceted glass beads.

When hooked, the spinner is over 4 inches long.

Here's a Picasa slideshow of the color selections and some of the Salmon that went for the prototypes.



Check them out in the Fish Creek Spinners web store!

Thursday, December 8, 2011

New look in the FCS Web store

As the snow piles up in Colorado, due to frigid temps and a bunch of arctic cold fronts, I dusted off the Javascript and HTML manuals and decided to do some rework on the Web Store and reinforce my primitive skills.

First I had to have an idea of what I wanted to change. That was easy, just about any customer facing page could be argued. Then how to change it would be more difficult.

A quick list
  • The Store Front
  • The Product List page
  • The Product Detail page
  • Finally, integration of the Hydrophone Records into Detail
There, I had some targets. Other changes would show up once I started moving things around and digging into the manuals.

The Store Front Page is the launching pad for textual categories and pictures of Featured Products, which were normally stagnant and something I usually forgot to update...



The Product List Page - this is the page that shows up when a category is punched on the Store Front or when some savvy user does a Product Search. It's display shows a vertical list of the thumbnails in the category or a list of the customers Search hits.



The Product Detail page  - this is the page where 'Add to Cart' happens. Either for Assortments, individual spinners or Model color selections. Most models have many color variations.



So that's what I wanted to change, now, how'm I gonna do that?

Well, I figured I'd use tables and mouseover=, mouseoff=, and click= in the HTML to trigger some events and functions, that's how. Then Javascript to run some functions like popups.

Tear it all apart and then look for missing quotes, semi-colons, brackets and mis-cased letters, lol.

Here's what it ended up looking like.

Store Front After screenshot


Ended up a condensed table of the product models with links to each Detail Page. A mouseover= event on each image enlarges the model image spinner over on the right and another shows a picture of a fish caught on the model. Try it out, its fun!


If someone still needs to use the categories to get around here's the Product List After screenshot of the Medium category.


I used a popup function (Window.Open) to enlarge each model, using a mouseover= event to trigger it and a mouseout= event to close each opened window. I used Picasa to create a slideshow of fish pictures sent to me by anglers using the 'Free Spinners for Fish pics' offer. Accurate for at least the photo's that I found with spinners in the picture. That's what plays on the bottom. 

Once you get to the Product Detail After, it looks like this




This one uses mouseover= to display fish caught on specific spinner colors within the model. There is also a default page or two displaying order placement tips and spinners hoping to catch a visiting angler's attention with quips and imagination. The bottom of the page has a flash movie of the models hydrophone recording and a screenshot of its noise wave profile.

Fun Stuff. Stop by and give it a test drive.

Since its hot off the press, I'd appreciate any feedback, suggestions or problems you find. My eyes are glazed over!

New Web Store look

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Tiger Fish in your boat - Zimbabwe, Africa

The 2011 KITFT Tiger Fish tournament ended a month ago and I just received some pictures from a member of a tournament fishing team - Hamba Bamba Team A.

This is a followup trip report post.

Stop by the new Web Store and checkout it's format!

Pictures from a different continent intrigue me, especially wildlife and scenery photo's. These Africa pictures were especially interesting and I thought I'd share them.



Fish Creek Spinners had customer connection with this team. They purchased and agreed to test some custom spinners I made for the tournament.

I totally respect the preparation and dedication these anglers and other teams put into the tournament, it's a big deal. It lasted three days; three HOT 110+ Fahrenheit degrees in the South Africa sun and water reflection.



The team wanted to beef up underwater reflection using heliographic mirrors on the blades and I rushed my designs to get them something to test. I posted a slideshow of the prototypes back in October.

Africa is a long way to ship a package of spinners! Shipping costs were astounding to someone not accustomed to international orders.

Here's some pictures from the tournament - Thanks Kevin!

Long days, from the crack of dawn

Brim farming platforms - a  hangout for large Tiger Fish and water birds

Up before light
Nightly accommodations for the excited anglers - a Houseboat at 3am
To 6pm sunset

Lots to see, out on the water -
Fishing in Osprey waters - always a good sign
Add an Eagle
And an ever guilty Cormorant

Hippo's - now that puts a new twist in the line
KITFT fishing pressure and media coverage
2011 KITFT International Tournament - 300+ teams
Tiger Fish caught during pre-tournament FCS testing - check out the teeth on that fish!
White FCS Special Edition
One of the white ones caught the fish

The FCS spinners didn't do a well as I hoped during pre-tournament testing and the team opted to use some familiar German spinners for the tournament.

Bummer, they didn't make the cut.


The mirrors I added, didn't hold up in the water and Tiger Fish teeth.

I was worried about it; lesson learned.

Still, I'm grateful for the opportunity to participate and get FCS wet on new waters in another continent.

These guys added Africa, to Australia, Asia, Europe and North America. Still need South America and Antarctica for the grand slam!

Lessons were learned, course corrections will be made, and relationships were established during the project that will persist.

Persistence is an FCS virtue.

Thanks to Team Hamba Bamba and Kevin (holding the Tiger Fish) for the pictures and support.

2012 is around the corner and a new year, Tiger Fishing continues on Lake Kariba!

High Five!

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Getting ready for the Ice

Making Worm Bling

These are fun, fishing through the ice, trolling, or drift casting.

Stop by the new Web Store and checkout it's format!

Here's a picture of the components used in this post 


Here's a list with a few choices - Right to Left starting in top right to bottom
  • 20# mono 
    • go with less test as desired
  • Various colored single hooks with raised eyes 
    • #4s and #2s
    • Circle hooks - most expensive
    • Octopus Hooks - typical 
    • Bait hooks - least expensive
  • 3D Prism eyes lacquered on a flat glass bead
    • various colors
  • Propeller blades
    • gold and nickel plated brass
    • Substitute your blade choice as desired
  • Body components 
    • Substitute and string your component choices per what you have available
    • Tri-colored zonker skirts
      • various colors
    • Bearing beads
      • gold and silver plated brass beads
Tying the rig

Cut the mono to your choice of length, leaving about 6 inches for knotting. I was making 3.5 ft rigs and cut at 4 feet.

Tying the hooks is about as tricky as it gets, everything else is choosing and threading the components in the sequence you want.

I'm right handed, so take that into consideration when reading my explanations.

Here's a picture of hook terminology.



Choose your first hook and thread the mono front to back through the raised eye. I thread about 1/2 inch. Enough that it lies along the shank up to the start of the bend.

The long end of the mono will be wrapped and strung back through the first hooks eye in the opposite direction.

Pinching the short piece of mono tightly to the hook shank with your left hand, grab the longer loose end just in front of the eye with your right and and bend it back under the eye and begin to wrap it clockwise, taking care to wrap each new loop adjacent and behind the first.

The first loop should be just behind the eye. This takes some practice to make the loops close and tight. I wrap about 10 times, up to my left hand.

The 1/2 inch of mono lying on the shaft is now tightly wrapped, but your left hand is still holding the hook stationary. Slightly re-position your left hand grasp, to pinch the loops and keep them from springing free. This action frees up your right hand to finish the knot.

Grab the loose mono and slid your right hand down to its end. Then, thread it back out the raised eye, in the opposite direction of your first pass through the eye. Once threaded, (while still holding the hook with your left hand), grab the threaded line with your right hand and pull out all the slack.

Once you've got most of the slack pulled out through the eye, relax your left hand grip on the remaining small loop.

Continue to grasp the hooks bend and barb with your left hand and cinch the knot tight with with your left hand.

First hook's knot almost finished

Nice job, time to admire your work. It looks great, right?

You finally get to let go of the first hook.  Time to pick out the second hook.

Re-position both hands to the end of the loose mono. Grasp the line near the end with your left hand and thread the end back to front through the second hooks eye, until you can again grasp the bend and barb with your left hand.

Pull the line carefully through the eye (remember there's a hook tied at the end of it) until the second hook is positioned about 3 inches (barb to barb) from the first.

Threading the second hook

You may have to do some hand shuffling to see how the two hooks line up. This is another tricky move I suppose.

I like them lined up, so I start both knots with the line lying along the top of the shaft and the two bends on the same plane. If that's not clear, after tying a few rigs, you'll see what I mean.

At this point, the instructions for the second hook, are the same as the first. Repeat and cinch down the second one.

Time to again admire your work. Nice job!

Worm Rig - Fluorescent Red #4 Octopus hook


The hard parts over, don't you love this job!

Stringing the components

There were a couple other time consuming preparation steps I neglected to mention for this job. I'm decking these worm rigs out with tri-color zonker strip skirts and 3D prism eyes.

The zonker strips were hand-tied on small brass tubes. A technique, all of it's own.

The 3D prism eyes were lacquered on to flat glass beads (fire-polished window pane). Another technique, all it's own.

Ignoring those two preparation steps, it's all down hill.

Positioning both hands up to the end of the line, I string a bearing bead on first, then string thru the zonker skirt, then another bearing bead.  Then the Prism Eye. Now another bearing bead, the Propeller blade, and a last bearing bead.

Nice work - I love my job!


Well done, Time to admire your work again!

Let all the components fall down the line up against the hooks and loop the end back against it's self to tie an overhand knot.  Find a place to hang the 4ft rigs and repeat until you've got what you need.

Fish Creek Spinners multi-color Worm Bling assortment

 I had to worry about packaging these for resale and the 4 ft of leader was a puzzle. I ended up  making some 1/2 inch thick 1 inch squares that fit into my clamshell containers.

I seated the hooks and wrapped the slack and other components around the square until finished.

The cube then fit into my packaging, ready for an interested angler to see.

Fish Creek Spinners Worm Bling

These rigs catch Walleyes being trolled in South Dakota. Guys in Montana have used them for Trout off fly rods, and the propellers will jig great through the ice in a couple months.

It won't be as much fun as making your own, but here's a couple 5 pack assortments over in the Fish Creek Spinners web store just waiting for you!  Gold or Nickel

Noise on the Line!