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Kuchelmeister MultiLoop
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Kuchelmeister MultiLoop

Kuchelmeister MultiLoop

$20.65

Original: $58.99

-65%
Kuchelmeister MultiLoop—

$58.99

$20.65

The Story

Kuchelmeister MultiLoop is a purpose-built fly-tying tool designed to form multiple, clean dubbing loops at once and twist them in parallel. By keeping loops aligned and separated as you load fibers, it streamlines composite-loop tying and produces uniform, repeatable textures that are difficult to achieve with a single-loop spinner. The result is faster collars, bodies, and brush-like constructions with better fiber distribution and fewer weak spots.

Because the tool supports separate loops, you can dedicate different loops to different jobs—fine dubbing for a binder in one, longer CDC or rabbit for movement in another—then twist and wrap the combined result in one pass. That flexibility makes it especially useful for shaggy Euro-nymph collars, composite leeches, CDC-heavy emergers, and any pattern that benefits from layered materials without bulk at the tie-in point.


How to Use It

After starting your thread, form two or more open loops from your tying thread and position the MultiLoop so each loop hangs freely without crossing. Lightly wax the inside faces of the loops for slick fibers, then stage your materials: short dubbing as a binder on one loop, longer fibers (CDC, rabbit, marabou, flash, rubber legs) on the other. Keep tips aligned and distribute evenly to avoid lumps. Close the loops, tension them with the tool, and spin until the fibers lock; if the loop kinks, relax slightly and add a few counter-spins to straighten before continuing.

Wrap the twisted loops forward under steady thread control, stroking fibers rearward each turn. For collars, make one to three tight turns; for bodies, spiral with minimal overlap to keep weight in check. Secure with two to three firm thread turns, trim the waste, and add a small thread dam to stand fibers up. Use more wax for coarse blends, less for CDC-heavy stacks, and match twist direction to your dominant hand for consistent tension.


Example Flies

CDC Bubble Caddis: Build a sparse dubbed underbody, then form two loops—one loaded lightly with fine antron or SLF as a binder, the other with matched CDC tips trimmed to 1.5 times the hook gap. Twist both loops, make two close wraps for a breathable, buoyant collar, then add a deer or elk wing over the top. The parallel-loop setup lets you keep the CDC airy while the binder loop anchors fibers so they don't spin out when you seat the wing.

Composite Loop Leech: On a streamer hook with a cone or slotted bead, split your loops so one carries a thin dubbing/flash blend and the other carries micro-zonker fur (or clipped rabbit) at 20–25 mm lengths. Twist hard for a brush-like rope and wrap a tapered body from rear to front. The MultiLoop approach binds the rabbit securely without building a bulky tie-in, adding movement from the longer fibers while the fine loop fills gaps for a solid silhouette.

UV Collar Jig Nymph: After forming a slim coated body on a jig hook, set two loops—one with a sparse UV ice dub blend, the other with short CDC barbs and two micro rubber legs per side. Twist, then make one or two tight turns behind the bead. The dual-loop method stacks sparkle and mobility without crowding the bead, preserving jig balance while creating a pulsing collar that pushes water on a tight-line drift.


Why We Like It

It solves two common problems at once: fiber control and time. By isolating components into separate loops and twisting them in parallel, you can stage complex composites quickly, get consistent density from fly to fly, and avoid the bulky tie-in points that come with premade brushes or single overloaded loops. The result is neater wraps, better durability, and cleaner transitions on small hooks.

It also expands what you can do with everyday materials. Sparse binders let you lock in slippery synthetics; dedicated loops keep CDC buoyant and lively; and longer fibers can be carried without torqueing your thread flat. If you tie a lot of collars and bodies that need movement but must remain slim—think Euro nymphs, emergers, and stillwater leeches—the MultiLoop workflow is efficient and repeatable.


Comparable Materials

Functionally similar tools include the SMHAEN Dubbing Spinner, Stonfo Turbo Dubbing Spinner, and the Marc Petitjean Magic Tool (for staging fibers before looping). SMHAEN’s spinner offers very precise tension with a narrow head that excels on small hooks but handles a single loop at a time; Stonfo’s turbo-style spinner adds speed and momentum for heavy composites yet can be bulky near the vise; Petitjean’s Magic Tool shines for aligning CDC and mixing materials on a clamp, then transferring them into one loop. Kuchelmeister MultiLoop stands out when you want multiple, separate loops spun concurrently to layer textures without re-opening the thread.

Description

Kuchelmeister MultiLoop is a purpose-built fly-tying tool designed to form multiple, clean dubbing loops at once and twist them in parallel. By keeping loops aligned and separated as you load fibers, it streamlines composite-loop tying and produces uniform, repeatable textures that are difficult to achieve with a single-loop spinner. The result is faster collars, bodies, and brush-like constructions with better fiber distribution and fewer weak spots.

Because the tool supports separate loops, you can dedicate different loops to different jobs—fine dubbing for a binder in one, longer CDC or rabbit for movement in another—then twist and wrap the combined result in one pass. That flexibility makes it especially useful for shaggy Euro-nymph collars, composite leeches, CDC-heavy emergers, and any pattern that benefits from layered materials without bulk at the tie-in point.


How to Use It

After starting your thread, form two or more open loops from your tying thread and position the MultiLoop so each loop hangs freely without crossing. Lightly wax the inside faces of the loops for slick fibers, then stage your materials: short dubbing as a binder on one loop, longer fibers (CDC, rabbit, marabou, flash, rubber legs) on the other. Keep tips aligned and distribute evenly to avoid lumps. Close the loops, tension them with the tool, and spin until the fibers lock; if the loop kinks, relax slightly and add a few counter-spins to straighten before continuing.

Wrap the twisted loops forward under steady thread control, stroking fibers rearward each turn. For collars, make one to three tight turns; for bodies, spiral with minimal overlap to keep weight in check. Secure with two to three firm thread turns, trim the waste, and add a small thread dam to stand fibers up. Use more wax for coarse blends, less for CDC-heavy stacks, and match twist direction to your dominant hand for consistent tension.


Example Flies

CDC Bubble Caddis: Build a sparse dubbed underbody, then form two loops—one loaded lightly with fine antron or SLF as a binder, the other with matched CDC tips trimmed to 1.5 times the hook gap. Twist both loops, make two close wraps for a breathable, buoyant collar, then add a deer or elk wing over the top. The parallel-loop setup lets you keep the CDC airy while the binder loop anchors fibers so they don't spin out when you seat the wing.

Composite Loop Leech: On a streamer hook with a cone or slotted bead, split your loops so one carries a thin dubbing/flash blend and the other carries micro-zonker fur (or clipped rabbit) at 20–25 mm lengths. Twist hard for a brush-like rope and wrap a tapered body from rear to front. The MultiLoop approach binds the rabbit securely without building a bulky tie-in, adding movement from the longer fibers while the fine loop fills gaps for a solid silhouette.

UV Collar Jig Nymph: After forming a slim coated body on a jig hook, set two loops—one with a sparse UV ice dub blend, the other with short CDC barbs and two micro rubber legs per side. Twist, then make one or two tight turns behind the bead. The dual-loop method stacks sparkle and mobility without crowding the bead, preserving jig balance while creating a pulsing collar that pushes water on a tight-line drift.


Why We Like It

It solves two common problems at once: fiber control and time. By isolating components into separate loops and twisting them in parallel, you can stage complex composites quickly, get consistent density from fly to fly, and avoid the bulky tie-in points that come with premade brushes or single overloaded loops. The result is neater wraps, better durability, and cleaner transitions on small hooks.

It also expands what you can do with everyday materials. Sparse binders let you lock in slippery synthetics; dedicated loops keep CDC buoyant and lively; and longer fibers can be carried without torqueing your thread flat. If you tie a lot of collars and bodies that need movement but must remain slim—think Euro nymphs, emergers, and stillwater leeches—the MultiLoop workflow is efficient and repeatable.


Comparable Materials

Functionally similar tools include the SMHAEN Dubbing Spinner, Stonfo Turbo Dubbing Spinner, and the Marc Petitjean Magic Tool (for staging fibers before looping). SMHAEN’s spinner offers very precise tension with a narrow head that excels on small hooks but handles a single loop at a time; Stonfo’s turbo-style spinner adds speed and momentum for heavy composites yet can be bulky near the vise; Petitjean’s Magic Tool shines for aligning CDC and mixing materials on a clamp, then transferring them into one loop. Kuchelmeister MultiLoop stands out when you want multiple, separate loops spun concurrently to layer textures without re-opening the thread.