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fatfingers

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Everything posted by fatfingers

  1. That's excellent work. I appreciate builders who put that much detail into their work.
  2. Hopkins was a pioneer.
  3. fatfingers

    6 inch cedar bait

    A natural classic. Awesome work!
  4. Great to hear from you, Pete. I hope you're well. It's time for you to come back to Ohio so we can go fishing together again! i was going to mention the Russians in my post! I follow and friended a number of them on Facebook and their work is outstanding to say the least. I look back now and I agree with you that the Americans usually look inward and essentially don't pay much attention to the influences of other countries. It's been an eye opener for me to see some the stuff from Asia, parts of Europe, and Russia.
  5. Interesting topic. I agree with Super Ron that there is still more room for innovation in the realm of painting than most builders think there is. Firetiger was not a pattern in my father's time. Today it can be deadly pretty much across the globe. Think about that. A simple pattern that simply didn't exist until about 35 years ago. As to innovation in building....I am of the opinion that the multi-jointed swim bait is a true innovation and if I had to choose, I'd choose Hopkins as the inventor...and he was a member of this board at the time. I will never forget seeing a video clip of his prototype swimming through the water. I showed the video to my wife and she got this inquisitive look on her face and said, "That's not a lure, that's a fish, right?" But that type of innovation, true ground-breaking innovation in building, doesn't come along with any regularity what so ever. It is instead usually stumbled upon, and then capitalized upon. I posted on this board, the first ever foiled bait with mesh beneath the foiling....believe it or not. It created quite a stir. I think it was was around the year 2005, but I can't remember for sure...and no one on this board or any other had seen anything like. I even had a guy who was a musky guide and taxidermist contact me via email and offer me a guided musky trip if I'd show him how I did it. But.....here are the interesting facts surrounding that foiling method: 1. It was not my idea. It was the brainchild of a TU member named Husky. He had thought of the idea, but just didn't have the patience to execute it properly and asked me to try it. I pointed out that it wash HIS idea when I posted the pictures. 2. It was truly ground-breaking in the US at the time. I gave step by step details as to how to do it and today it is a commonplace method. 3. But, as Paul Harvey used to say, here's the rest of the story....It was a method that had been used by builders overseas LONG before Husky came up with the idea and I executed it, so to speak, and presented it as "new." I later found out that builders from other countries had been placing netting under foil for many years. How did I find that out? I have a blog called "Fired up the airbrush..." in the Tackle Making forum of Ohiogamefishing.com that I started in about 2005...on that blog, I eventually posted the work of builders from all over the country and the world and that is how it was brought to my attention. It was already happening...we in America simply just didn't know it. The Internet was still in its infancy, basically, and the language barrier precluded message boards from "sharing" with overseas builders. Today, of course, there are Facebook "groups" and translation is available at the push of a button. And I have to tell you that some of the work I see from overseas is nothing shy of amazing. I thoroughly enjoy looking at their work, even after looking at baits since the nineties when I began to build. This board has a long history and much of it is not known to many of its members. There are builders who cut their teeth here and quietly moved on. Their innovation and work is now commonly accepted as routine, but it is still THEIR work. There are too many names to mention, but some very impressive work was incubated and shared right here on TU. Today's newer builders can come out of the gate building and painting at a level that took us years to achieve because of the incredible amount of information that is so readily available today and wasn't available at all just 20 years ago. Innovation is still occurring. There is still more to be done. But it is usually something that you can't force, it just happens and usually over time. And it's why I am still a builder.
  6. fatfingers

    Fatfingers Flatshad

    7 inch musky/pike crank Three custom blended pearls. Gold micro scale on the belly with a shot of candy red under the gill area.
  7. This may have been mentioned... You can also drill a hole big enough for a 1/4 or 3/8 inch oak dowel rod, glue the dowel rod in, cut it flush and then glue the screw eye into the dowel.
  8. fatfingers

    Cedar squarebill

    You faded those stripes down the sides PERFECTLY! Beautiful work.
  9. fatfingers

    1.5 cedar squarebill

    You have an amazing eye for color. Beautiful work.
  10. fatfingers

    Fatfingers Flatshad

    Thanks. Not through-wired.
  11. fatfingers

    Fatfingers Flatshad

    Green tod gold pearl over a faint bluish pearl base coat. Trolls well at speed. Dives deep. It likes long walks on the beach and early Beach Boys music.
  12. fatfingers

    Cedar squarebills9.jpg

    I could reach for any one of these and catch fish . Super clean.
  13. fatfingers

    6 inch cedar perch

    Beautiful work. I love the gill plates.
  14. fatfingers

    Cedar squarebills

    I knew that was yours the moment I laid eyes on it. It's perfect.
  15. Thanks, you guys. This one was fun to make.
  16. 5 1/2 inch musky crank
  17. Perfectly executed from front to back. Beautiful.
  18. I've used the stuff for about 12 years, but only for certain colors. I primarily use urethanes. Ive had no issues with it reacting with epoxy clears or the urethane. It does provide access to a few interesting colors, with the only downside being that when purchased in such small quantities, it winds up costing about 80 trillion dollars a gallon. If you're used to the water based paints, the enamels and urethanes will be a brave new world for you as a far a speed, coverage, easier fades, and the lack of the need to heat set. They can be easily controlled as far as thinning with medium reducer. Clean up is with lacquer thinner, which is a deal breaker for guys used to the water based stuff. You must have a solid paint booth system with adequate ventilation and/or a mask, so usually this idea falls on deaf ears. Ive also use both water base and urethanes on rare occasions, but only with a coat of epoxy in between them. A coat of Intercoat clear also works if properly applied.
  19. fatfingers

    7 inch crank

    I use a variety of materials for special effects, including foils, papers, glitter, pearls, etc. Also certain paints used in combination either various base coats can prods a variety of hues and effects.
  20. fatfingers

    7 inch crank

    Thanks. We have Gizzards and Threadfins.
  21. fatfingers

    7 inch crank

    Alaskan yellow cedar.
  22. "Glidebait" is a term used VERY loosely in the world of building. It can refer to a number of profiles/styles and it variety of actions. "Jerk bait" is another term that means different things at times, especially among musky guys versus bass guys In the musky kingdom of baits, not all baits are created equally when referring to action which consistently triggers strikes, although a variety of weighting can trigger fish occasionally. Some of the stuff I see posted in video form on Facebook shows a bait that will "run" but it is almost the antithesis of the action I have found most effective.
  23. In the last ten or twelve years, I've heard of a dozen tricks to achieve a shine that mimics a new trailer hitch...until you so much as touch it with anything resembling a clear coat.
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