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Steve Farrar SF Blend

R50.00R66.00

A blend of slinky fibre with fine mylar flash – The highly acclaimed SF Blend, the ultimate go-to material for saltwater fly tying. Developed by renowned tyer Steve Farrar in collaboration with Fishient, this material is an essential choice for every saltwater fly tyer.

SKU: Steve Farrar Blend Category:

Steve Farrar SF Blend for Fly tying, made and available in South Africa

Introducing the highly acclaimed SF Blend, the ultimate go-to material for saltwater fly tying. Developed by renowned tyer Steve Farrar in collaboration with Fishient, this material is an essential choice for every saltwater fly tyer.

What sets SF Blend apart is its unique tapered design right out of the packet. With SF Blend, you can create a fly using just this material. It combines the perfect blend of Slinky Fibre and Slinky Blend, enriched with fine mylar flash.

Fly tiers worldwide consider SF Blend as the top-tier material for saltwater streamers. To enhance the allure of your patterns, bleeding colors incorporate red flash, while darker shades feature dark green and blue flash. Specialized Silver Blends naturally showcase silver flash, while the remaining options showcase pearl flash.

SF Blend boasts 10-inch long fibers, providing ample material to work with. Whether you're tying freshwater or saltwater baitfish imitations, Steve Farrar's SF Blend is an ideal choice. Its impeccable tapering enables smooth, elegant profiles, while its ability to maintain shape in the water ensures a lifelike appearance. Moreover, SF Blend exhibits natural movement that fish find irresistible.

Join the ranks of successful saltwater fly tyers by incorporating SF Blend into your arsenal. Its versatility, reliable performance, and lifelike qualities make it an indispensable choice for creating captivating baitfish imitations in both fresh and saltwater environments.

Here is a video on tying one of the most popular flies using SF Blend, the SF Baitfish.

See more of our synthetic fly tying materials, like Fuzzy Fibre, Grizzly Fibre  and Fish Scale

Steve Farrar SF Blend review by The Caddis Fly

Steve Farrar’s Blend: Review and list of Must-Have Colors to tie this season

OK fellow baitfish fly-tyers, here is a questin answered, as in – Hi Jay, I’m interested in trying some of the Steve Farrar’s synthetic wing materials you have mentioned in your fly tying videos, but am a little unsure as to where to start.

Having had the opportunity to look at and handle virtually every color of the Farrar synthetics to date, I have had a ball experimenting with these.  I first note that there is a Steve Farrar Blend, and then there is also a UV Steve Farrar Blend, and not all colors are available in the UV material.  There are also, naturally other materials offered that make great fresh and saltwater baitfish patterns, but i am going to focus this product review on the Farrar’s Blend in the colors that I find myself most often incorporating into my flies.

Points of note:

One point of note, I have found the perceived barriers or distinctions I formerly drew between ocean flies and freshwater flies dissolving.  Pretty much gone.  I now fish my river flies in the sea and my sea flies in the river.  Nice.

Texture assessment:  this material is a synthetic and it relatively fine.  Similar to Bucktail but a little slimmer fibers, I would say. The fibers are somewhat “translucent-ish” if that makes sense, because they range from very solid in the dark colors to the translucent in colors like the pink and chartreuse and mackerel.  Most of the fibers have a little crinkle in them – that is to say they are not necessarily arrow shaft straight like we expect with Fish Hair.  The SF Blend fibers are firmer than Craft Fur (by far) but have more wiggle and flex than Fish Hair.

Typically NOT boring: these SF Blends usually but not always have a variety of colors mixed together to make the overall color appearance.  Not so with some colors.  The Bleeding Black and Midnight Blitz are strictly black fibers with added metallic sheen fibers in the red or blue range to enhance the appearance.  Point is, with many synthetic fibers you get a single color and stiffness in all of the fibers, but with SF you have a blend of fibers that I think make the product fishier to both tier and the intended eaters of our creations.

Character:

Slightly compressible.  Think they are anyway.  Less to than bucktail and Craft Fur, and EP Fibers and other related products.  More so than Fish Hair.  Maybe about the same as with Yak hair, but I honestly have only a passing acquaintance with the Yak.  I tie with Clear Cure Goo and traditional cement like Penetrator (addicted to the sniff of the good old stuff) and have good results with both.

Length and tips character:  the bundles of fibers are roughly 9 inches long.  because these bundles consist of  blended loose fibers, the bundles have an appearance that is much like hair because the tips are not squared-off.  Wings constructed by simply clipping off a pinch of SF Blend and tying it in look great and require no effort to create a taper like we would need to do if using a different product that consists of equal length fibers.

After creating natural looking wings/flies using the fibers cut directly from both ends of the hank, one may create a taper by systematically messing up the squared-off bundle of fibers remaining in the center of the hank.

Overall, SF Blend and SF UV bend is excellent stuff to work with at the fly bench.  It comes in hanks of loose fibers with the sparkle and color variation blended in.  I sometimes cut a hank in two equal sections to tie with.  Other times I will separate off a section of fibers thick enough to tie a single fly and then tie it in using the double-back-over technique.

Steve Farrar SF Blend material has earned my respect and absolute devotion over a full season tying fresh and saltwater flies.

Here are my most reached-for Steve Farrar’s Blend colors.  Obviously this list is shaped by my quirks and the local environments i fish.  The synthetics are offered in a color range that is probably four or five times longer than my list, and you should certainly browse the full list to see if some of the colors would better suit the bait-fish imitations you tie for different geographic regions and fish species.

Colours:

Bleeding Grey: I use this for bellies, lateral lines, and backs on different flies.  it has sheen and hints of red and will find its way onto your bench I’m betting.

Chartreuse: one of several color shades, this is my favorite middle of the road pick for the white and green Clouser, a catch everything anytime fly.

Dark Green:  use this instead of the Chartreuse for a switch up.

Herring Back:  When ya gotta have a blue herring back on your fly, this one can’t be beat.

Bleeding Black:  I use this shade for backs of Sea Flies tied for Ling Cod, Chinook Clousers, and also for tails on Comets.  Think it will find its way into my Intruders eventually too.

Midnight Blitz:  Much like the above shade, but this one has blue sparkle hints instead of red.  Bait-fish backs and Comet Tails.

Bucktail White:  This is the brightest of the white shades offered and a bit more crinkly, with lots of shiny fibers blended in.  I tie with all the white shades, but this is my choice when I want the white to POP.

Pink:  forgot to put pink in the photo but this is my choice for my pink and chartreuse Chinook clousers and my coho bucktail offshore flies.  Steelhead had better look out when I fish my Bleeding Mackerel and Pink Clouser this winter.  Hah!

Fl. Chartreuse:  Rather pale compared to Fl Chartreuse Bucktail, this will still light up a fly in tidewater and ocean environments, and I tie with it regularly.

Electric Yellow:  ya want bright?  Here you go.  Almost Fl Yellow Chartreuse, I tie in a pinch of this color if i want my fly to really shine in low light conditions.

Bleeding Orange:  A favorite offshore rockfish and Ling Cod color, also used in my Chinook Comets.

Hot orange:  Darker and hotter and mottled like most of Steve’s blends, this is another offshore bottom fish selection that I will fish for Kings in 2014, soon as I catch my breath

Mullet Brown:  If you tie bottom fish flies, you gotta try this stuff.  Mottled and sparkly with browns and hints of black.  Smallie Clousers should be irresistible with this, but never tried it myself yet.

Bleeding Red:  Perfect mottled dark red with sparkly hints for my Patriot Clouser pattern.

Violet Night:  An awesome purple beauty for backs of unweighted offshore flies, including Albacore flies, and my dark day Clousers.

Bleeding Purple:  Adds the hint of red sparkle and

Bleeding Mackerel: Among my top 6 colors.  Difficult to describe.  This is a greenish, bluish, got some black and some sparkle and some red and some fluorescence and it works for backs and bellies and is just amazing stuff.  YOU MUST GET SOME OF THIS.

More colours:

Top six Farrar Blend colors:  Bucktail White, Bleeding Mackerel, Bleeding Black, Bleeding Grey, Fl Chartreuse, Chartreuse, Pink, Dark Green.  OK, that’s eight top colors, but hey, I’m just say-in’ these are fantastic assets on the tying bench.  You literally can not go wrong if you start with these colors, remembering you will need several packs of the white to tie your bellies with different color backs……

Jay Nicholas, December 2013