I have a"Spiroflex" patent Slotless Devon Minnow still attached to it's original card and in the original box though the cellophane window is missing.
I always thought it was made by Allcocks but have only just noticed that behind the treble hook is a trademark which is obviously not that company.
Can anyone identify the maker?
Apologies for the poor photos but I didn't want to remove the lure from the card
Also they are my wife's fingers holding the lure not mine.
Mike
Lure Maker Identification Please
- MrCrabtree
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- Olly
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Re: Lure Maker Identification Please
Very similar to Farlows Holdfast logo.
- MrCrabtree
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Re: Lure Maker Identification Please
Hi Olly
I see where you are coming from but not convinced. I had a look at some Farlow's items on line but the logo is definitely different
unless they changed it
Thanks anyway
Mike
I see where you are coming from but not convinced. I had a look at some Farlow's items on line but the logo is definitely different
unless they changed it
Thanks anyway
Mike
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Re: Lure Maker Identification Please
Farlows is the suspended salmon!
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Re: Lure Maker Identification Please
It does look the same as this one which is according to Graham Turner's book is the early Farlow trademark but personally don't think so
I've seen a fair few Farlow plate wind reels with the fish trademark stamped on the foot and with Farlow details engraved on them. As well these I've seen them with just fish stamped on the reel foot and with other maker/retailers details all be it not many and they all seem to be around 1880 -1910 period but what I've never seen is a Farlow patent lever reel with the fish trademark and considering that there were over 3000 of these reels made in this time scale you would have there trademark on them if it were the case.
I've also had a couple of 221Strand brass winches as well as early 191 Strand dating 1843-1870 none of these had the stamped fish trademark.
Farlow Holdfast trademark
I've also seen this trademark which is definitely Farlow on a plate wind reels.
All just an opinion
I've seen a fair few Farlow plate wind reels with the fish trademark stamped on the foot and with Farlow details engraved on them. As well these I've seen them with just fish stamped on the reel foot and with other maker/retailers details all be it not many and they all seem to be around 1880 -1910 period but what I've never seen is a Farlow patent lever reel with the fish trademark and considering that there were over 3000 of these reels made in this time scale you would have there trademark on them if it were the case.
I've also had a couple of 221Strand brass winches as well as early 191 Strand dating 1843-1870 none of these had the stamped fish trademark.
Farlow Holdfast trademark
I've also seen this trademark which is definitely Farlow on a plate wind reels.
All just an opinion
There are three things that improve with age: wine, friendship and water sense, and there's no short cut.
Anthony Shepherdson
Anthony Shepherdson
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Re: Lure Maker Identification Please
My catalogue is 1938.
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Re: Lure Maker Identification Please
I keep discovering these interesting old threads! (And therefore chipping in years too late ).
Looking at the logo on Mike's carded Spiroflex minnow, I think the 'fish' is only part of it.
If you look more closely, the 'fish' is actually a fish-shaped church weather vane and the structure beneath it is the church spire, spire being a play on the lure's name Spiroflex!
It seems very likely that 'Spiroflex' is threfore not just the name of lure, but also that of it's maker.
(Any partial resemblance to the early Farlows 'salmon' logo, later superseded by their 'holdfast' logo, I think is purely coincidental).
I'm pretty sure these lures were indeed distributed to the trade by Allcocks, but possibly other wholesalers too.
Mine is not carded, unfortunately.
NB. Although patented, the 'Spiroflex' is by no means the first lure to feature a spiral wire body. Wm. Bartleet's 'Serpentanic' bait pre-dates it by many decades (1894). This one is among the most prized lures in my collection:
Looking at the logo on Mike's carded Spiroflex minnow, I think the 'fish' is only part of it.
If you look more closely, the 'fish' is actually a fish-shaped church weather vane and the structure beneath it is the church spire, spire being a play on the lure's name Spiroflex!
It seems very likely that 'Spiroflex' is threfore not just the name of lure, but also that of it's maker.
(Any partial resemblance to the early Farlows 'salmon' logo, later superseded by their 'holdfast' logo, I think is purely coincidental).
I'm pretty sure these lures were indeed distributed to the trade by Allcocks, but possibly other wholesalers too.
Mine is not carded, unfortunately.
NB. Although patented, the 'Spiroflex' is by no means the first lure to feature a spiral wire body. Wm. Bartleet's 'Serpentanic' bait pre-dates it by many decades (1894). This one is among the most prized lures in my collection:
A seeker of "the fell tyrant of the liquid plain".