Ideas on how to repair and revitalize your old baits and protect your new ones.
Thanks to Shane Mesche for the help getting started. Here are some articles if you want to look at painting or just clear coating your baits to keep the colors on them longer.
Shane’s article in November 08 Texas Saltwater fishing Mag is on page 68 in the FREE archives. You can read about three years of past mag articles.
http://viewer.zmags.com/publication/...c#/8844e03c/68 (You may have to do the free signup to see this. I pop right to it.) YOu can access about 3 years worth of old articles.
Even if you do not paint your baits this is a great way to clear coat those reflective baits that the chrome chips off the first or second fish. You can clean up old baits and clear coat them and they will look better than new.
http://www.tackleunderground.com/forum/index.php This is one of the largest world wide sites on all types of lure making that I have found. Lot of these guys make the one of a kind custom painted baits that most of us will never do.
Personally I want to be able to touch up add gills, throats and color or glitter to baits that do not come in the colors that I want. Lastly and for some of you they have “brew your own†forum too so you can have something to drink when you cannot fish.
Most of the baits are airbrushed with water based paints from the hobby shop like “Hobby Lobby or Michaels. http://www.createxcolors.com/ then clear coated the way Shane does it to protect the bait
Air brushes run from 15 dollars up. I have the high end Harbor Freight (HF) 15 dollars air brush for what I do.
You need a small air compressor or some compressed air to run the air brush.
You need a small wheel to slowly turn the baits till they dry or to keep the epoxy from pooling. I use a bbq motor with a piece of foam on the end to hold 3 or 4 baits. Tackelunderground has plans that can dry 20 baits at the time.
HF has the cheap exacto knives that you can use to hold the baits while you work on them. Take the blade out and grip the front or back eye on the bait. I take these with the bait attached and stick them into the small holes made in the foam that attaches to my BBQ Motor that I have used to spin rod blanks.
http://www.rivercitylures.50megs.com...aa/ch1/ch1.htm Is an article from SA that shows how to refinish some of the old style lipped crank baits.
http://home.mchsi.com/~djaroscak/buildinglure.html#indexpage Another site that builds lures from scratch and his tips and tricks.
Enjoy.
JimD
You can save me all those old worn out baits if you do ot want them.
Thanks to Shane Mesche for the help getting started. Here are some articles if you want to look at painting or just clear coating your baits to keep the colors on them longer.
Shane’s article in November 08 Texas Saltwater fishing Mag is on page 68 in the FREE archives. You can read about three years of past mag articles.
http://viewer.zmags.com/publication/...c#/8844e03c/68 (You may have to do the free signup to see this. I pop right to it.) YOu can access about 3 years worth of old articles.
Even if you do not paint your baits this is a great way to clear coat those reflective baits that the chrome chips off the first or second fish. You can clean up old baits and clear coat them and they will look better than new.
http://www.tackleunderground.com/forum/index.php This is one of the largest world wide sites on all types of lure making that I have found. Lot of these guys make the one of a kind custom painted baits that most of us will never do.
Personally I want to be able to touch up add gills, throats and color or glitter to baits that do not come in the colors that I want. Lastly and for some of you they have “brew your own†forum too so you can have something to drink when you cannot fish.
Most of the baits are airbrushed with water based paints from the hobby shop like “Hobby Lobby or Michaels. http://www.createxcolors.com/ then clear coated the way Shane does it to protect the bait
Air brushes run from 15 dollars up. I have the high end Harbor Freight (HF) 15 dollars air brush for what I do.
You need a small air compressor or some compressed air to run the air brush.
You need a small wheel to slowly turn the baits till they dry or to keep the epoxy from pooling. I use a bbq motor with a piece of foam on the end to hold 3 or 4 baits. Tackelunderground has plans that can dry 20 baits at the time.
HF has the cheap exacto knives that you can use to hold the baits while you work on them. Take the blade out and grip the front or back eye on the bait. I take these with the bait attached and stick them into the small holes made in the foam that attaches to my BBQ Motor that I have used to spin rod blanks.
http://www.rivercitylures.50megs.com...aa/ch1/ch1.htm Is an article from SA that shows how to refinish some of the old style lipped crank baits.
http://home.mchsi.com/~djaroscak/buildinglure.html#indexpage Another site that builds lures from scratch and his tips and tricks.
Enjoy.
JimD
You can save me all those old worn out baits if you do ot want them.
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