Fly tying: patterns, step-by-step guides and materials for trout and salmon
There is something in fly tying that fishing alone can never quite satisfy. The vise, the thread, the moment a pattern comes together – and then the fish that takes it. Trout & Salmon’s fly tying pages exist for anglers who understand that.
Our step-by-step pattern guides cover the full spectrum – dry flies, nymphs, wet flies and emergers for wild brown trout and reservoir rainbows, through to hairwing and tube flies for salmon and sea trout. From classic patterns like the Ally’s Shrimp, Willie Gunn and Sedgehog to modern synthetics and Euro nymphing techniques, we cover the flies that actually catch fish on UK waters.
Materials advice, tool reviews and tying tips from some of the most respected names in the sport. The bench starts here.
A highly effective buggy all-rounder for use during spring hatches of olive flies on lake or river
This flashy blue version of former T&S editor Sandy Leventon’s famous spring salmon fly is tied here on a tube
Dreaming of the new season? Start your fly-tying campaign with these goodies recommended by the editor
Designed to imitate emerging flies on rivers and stillwaters, the Klinkhamer is also used in duo rigs.
A subtle fly for deep water when grayling have seen too many pink or garish patterns
Follow our step-by-step tying of this classic soft-hackled fly, best fished in water with a peaty stain
A deadly back-end salmon fly to stir the most reluctant fish. Follow our step-by-step tying
Sinuous lure that rarely fails to attract fry-feeding stillwater trout.
Great all-rounder for river trout, especially effective under bankside trees in summer.
Sea-trout lure that pops irresistibly in the surface.