Original: $12.89
-65%$12.89
$4.51The Story
The Stonfo Hackle Gauge is a precise, easy-to-read sizing tool from Stonfo that helps you match hackle to hook sizes with confidence. By correlating barb length to common hook numbers, it takes the guesswork out of selecting feathers for dry flies, parachutes, and palmered patterns. You can quickly verify whether a saddle or cape feather will produce the footprint and support you want on the water.
Compact and durable, the gauge keeps proportions consistent from fly to fly and across different capes. It’s especially helpful when switching between brands or between capes and saddles, ensuring your size 14s actually behave like 14s. The clear scale makes fast checks possible without interrupting your tying rhythm.
How to Use It
Pick your target hook size, then prep a hackle by stripping the base and stroking fibers perpendicular to the stem. Lay the feather against the gauge’s reference lines and check where the barb tips land. If the tips meet the ring or mark for your hook size, you’ve got a match; if they fall short, go up a feather, and if they overshoot, go down. For stiffer, more buoyant dries in choppy water, you can intentionally choose a slightly larger reading; for flatter water, a true-to-size or slightly undersized reading often looks and lands better.
Calibrate your eye by confirming the gauge with a known hook brand you use often. Record which sections of a cape produce which sizes—it speeds repeatability. Keep your wrap count consistent (for most trout dries, 3–5 turns at the front or 5–7 palmered down a body), and use the gauge to maintain the same hackle diameter across batches.
Example Flies
Adams Dry Fly: For a size 16, select matching brown and grizzly hackles that read at 16 on the gauge so the footprints from both feathers balance. After tail and dubbed body, make 2–3 turns of each hackle in alternating sequence at the front, then a tidy head. The gauge prevents oversized barbs that push the fly off the surface or undersized barbs that let it sag in riffles.
Elk Hair Caddis: On a size 14, choose a hackle that reads 14 for general conditions. If you expect rough pocket water, bump to a hackle that reads 12 while still tying on the 14 hook to gain more stiffness and surface area. Palmer 5–7 even turns from the thorax back to the bend, then trim the underside if you prefer a lower stance; the gauge ensures the palmered wraps create a stable, consistent footprint.
Griffith's Gnat: For a size 20, select a grizzly hackle that reads 20 to keep the silhouette tight around the peacock herl body. Palmer 4–6 compact turns from front to back and tie off at the bend. The gauge helps avoid a splayed, messy footprint that can happen if you pick a feather with longer-than-needed barbs on these tiny hooks.
Why We Like It
It delivers repeatable proportions without slowing you down. By translating barb length into familiar hook sizes, the Stonfo Hackle Gauge removes the uncertainty that comes from switching between different capes and brands. That consistency shows up on the water: flies float the way you intended and look uniform across a dozen.
It also protects your premium hackle. Instead of trial-and-error at the vise, you confirm sizing first, waste fewer feathers, and keep your best sections for the right hooks. The high-contrast markings are easy to read, and the tool’s small footprint keeps it handy without crowding your bench.
Comparable Materials
Griffin’s Hook/Hackle Gauge and the Renzetti Hackle Gauge perform the same core job. Griffin’s version is straightforward and commonly used right at the vise, while Renzetti’s plate-style gauge offers a clean, linear readout. Stonfo’s strength is its clear, high-visibility scale and quick, no-fuss checks, making it an easy choice if you value fast readability and consistent sizing. Functionally, all three will get you to the same destination; the best pick comes down to which format you find easiest to read at your bench.
Description
The Stonfo Hackle Gauge is a precise, easy-to-read sizing tool from Stonfo that helps you match hackle to hook sizes with confidence. By correlating barb length to common hook numbers, it takes the guesswork out of selecting feathers for dry flies, parachutes, and palmered patterns. You can quickly verify whether a saddle or cape feather will produce the footprint and support you want on the water.
Compact and durable, the gauge keeps proportions consistent from fly to fly and across different capes. It’s especially helpful when switching between brands or between capes and saddles, ensuring your size 14s actually behave like 14s. The clear scale makes fast checks possible without interrupting your tying rhythm.
How to Use It
Pick your target hook size, then prep a hackle by stripping the base and stroking fibers perpendicular to the stem. Lay the feather against the gauge’s reference lines and check where the barb tips land. If the tips meet the ring or mark for your hook size, you’ve got a match; if they fall short, go up a feather, and if they overshoot, go down. For stiffer, more buoyant dries in choppy water, you can intentionally choose a slightly larger reading; for flatter water, a true-to-size or slightly undersized reading often looks and lands better.
Calibrate your eye by confirming the gauge with a known hook brand you use often. Record which sections of a cape produce which sizes—it speeds repeatability. Keep your wrap count consistent (for most trout dries, 3–5 turns at the front or 5–7 palmered down a body), and use the gauge to maintain the same hackle diameter across batches.
Example Flies
Adams Dry Fly: For a size 16, select matching brown and grizzly hackles that read at 16 on the gauge so the footprints from both feathers balance. After tail and dubbed body, make 2–3 turns of each hackle in alternating sequence at the front, then a tidy head. The gauge prevents oversized barbs that push the fly off the surface or undersized barbs that let it sag in riffles.
Elk Hair Caddis: On a size 14, choose a hackle that reads 14 for general conditions. If you expect rough pocket water, bump to a hackle that reads 12 while still tying on the 14 hook to gain more stiffness and surface area. Palmer 5–7 even turns from the thorax back to the bend, then trim the underside if you prefer a lower stance; the gauge ensures the palmered wraps create a stable, consistent footprint.
Griffith's Gnat: For a size 20, select a grizzly hackle that reads 20 to keep the silhouette tight around the peacock herl body. Palmer 4–6 compact turns from front to back and tie off at the bend. The gauge helps avoid a splayed, messy footprint that can happen if you pick a feather with longer-than-needed barbs on these tiny hooks.
Why We Like It
It delivers repeatable proportions without slowing you down. By translating barb length into familiar hook sizes, the Stonfo Hackle Gauge removes the uncertainty that comes from switching between different capes and brands. That consistency shows up on the water: flies float the way you intended and look uniform across a dozen.
It also protects your premium hackle. Instead of trial-and-error at the vise, you confirm sizing first, waste fewer feathers, and keep your best sections for the right hooks. The high-contrast markings are easy to read, and the tool’s small footprint keeps it handy without crowding your bench.
Comparable Materials
Griffin’s Hook/Hackle Gauge and the Renzetti Hackle Gauge perform the same core job. Griffin’s version is straightforward and commonly used right at the vise, while Renzetti’s plate-style gauge offers a clean, linear readout. Stonfo’s strength is its clear, high-visibility scale and quick, no-fuss checks, making it an easy choice if you value fast readability and consistent sizing. Functionally, all three will get you to the same destination; the best pick comes down to which format you find easiest to read at your bench.



















