Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum

Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: canucksfan233 on July 20, 2025, 10:20:30 PM

Title: Blade Color
Post by: canucksfan233 on July 20, 2025, 10:20:30 PM
What's your take on copper vs silver blades for spoons/spinners?

I've heard copper for cloudy, silver for sunny. I feel like its more luck and if a fish is willing to bite.
Title: Re: Blade Color
Post by: RalphH on July 21, 2025, 08:57:44 AM
Great question and I'd add gold into the mix. I think gold and copper are very similar though I realize some are fanatics about copper.

From what I can find gold (and copper?) absorbs blues and green while it reflects more orange and red plus much more into the UV spectrum. That should be more effective in lower light and colored water.

Silver reflects light across a a broader spectrum so looks "whiter".

I am a fanatic about gold flash in my flies particularly in the fall through spring. I also prefer gold for spinners and spoons for salmon and steelhead. Still I carry examples of both (and copper).

Yet on days when I had really good action and ran out of gold, switching to my stock of silver spinners I did just as well as with the gold. Best I recall that was also true of cloudy days later in the fall. My guess is spinner design may be  more important or perhaps it's just the willingness of the fish to strike!
Title: Re: Blade Color
Post by: RockyShowers on July 21, 2025, 03:41:46 PM
I've caught some nice trout in rivers on copper spoons but never a salmon. I have caught salmon on "crazy hot" spoons with silver/white sides and green/pink/black accents. I've caught some large female white springs floating silver colorado blades when the roe bites turned off. Cloudy or sunny it seems the whites take the silver. Have not personally had success with other colours.
Title: Re: Blade Color
Post by: banx on July 23, 2025, 11:23:59 AM
Kind of like the same idea about bright days, bright presentation.

I am the past vice president of the colorado blade fan club.  I used to make them at home with quality components.  Especially good siwash hooks.

copper, brass and silver.

Brass was my go to and worked most conditions.  Brass or Copper in the morn, silver from the afternoon till dusk.  They work well under a float as well, but I preferred to cast and feel the bump.
They work exceptionally well for coho in frog water.  They also troll great on their own with a split shot tipped with worm or shrimp on our coastal and interior lakes.
Title: Re: Blade Color
Post by: canucksfan233 on July 24, 2025, 07:10:05 PM
Do you feel like the shape of the blade matters? Colorado vs Indiana
Title: Re: Blade Color
Post by: jim on July 27, 2025, 05:27:20 AM
Indiana blades are for faster speeds, colorado for slow speed.
Title: Re: Blade Color
Post by: RalphH on July 27, 2025, 08:07:26 AM
Indiana blades are for faster speeds, colorado for slow speed.

or fast vs slow currents or retrieves. I personally favor French and Colorado blades. Some people prefer heavier gauge metal on blades, hammered vs non, etc.
Title: Re: Blade Color
Post by: clarki on July 27, 2025, 09:25:20 AM
They work exceptionally well for coho in frog water. 

Agreed. Costs a fraction of what commercial spinners cost so you are less reluctant to toss it into woody hidey holes.  Also they are unweighted so less of a splash hitting the water which I think helps with a stealthy approach. With unweighted you sacrifice casting distance but hidey hole fishing is often close quarters anyways.
Title: Re: Blade Color
Post by: RalphH on July 27, 2025, 10:02:58 AM
the simplest way to make a spinner with a Colorado blade is with 2 swivels and a split ring:

(https://www.bcfishingjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Colorado-Blade-Components.jpg)

most commonly fished under a float. You can of course use a spinner harness (wire) as commercially available spinners are made. Requires a few more components and a little more manual dexterity.

from: https://www.bcfishingjournal.com/project/how-to-build-colorado-spinner-blades/