I must wholeheartedly agree with Wayne... A couple of years ago I read an article in one of the fly-fishing periodicals about a guy who's specialty was hair-wing patterns... Wullfs, Trudes, Humpy's and the like. He was a FANATIC about material preperation and cleaning, and how it helped his tying. I started going over my own collection, and wound up spending the better part of a year "preening" things.
Of course,when you go through all of that,you start to look more closely at how you store your "newly restored" materials!! It kinda becomes a hobby within a hobby!! But it DOES make a noticable difference in your tying!!
I would only add one more piece of equipment to what Wayne has already mentioned: A small medium-stiff bristled hair brush. I use a bit of a different approach to drying hackle capes, and bucktails... that is, laying them skin side down on a thickness of newsprint, and brushing the feathers/hair into an orderly arrangement, then covering them with another thickness of newspaper,and applying some gentle but firm weight. In the case of the bucktail, uncover it after 8-10 hrs, and flip it over. Brush the hair away from the skin, trying to create and "open" v-shape, rather than just brushing straight back toward the tip. I have saved tails that I thought were unusable this way. (Now I do this to bucktails I buy,as well as the ones I get from hunter friends)
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