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Posted

At one time I used to think color was everything but now I'm finding that for some strange reason I tend to believe that whatever I have on at the moment, if it's not too far off from what I'm trying to make it look like, will work to catch a bass from whatever target I'm throwing to.

I tend to stick with natural colors, whites, browns, greens, for clear to slightly stained water, and black or other dark colors for dark, muddy water. Occasionally I'll use a bright color like chartreuse depending on the light conditions. Seems like to me now it's more about how light or dark the lure is instead of the color itself.

Just yesterday I was thinking I'd like to switch to a solid white color with a white tail in a spinner I was using for stained water instead of the brown and white with brown tail I had on. In order to lighten it up some so it was more visible. But I was too close to a stump I wanted to cast to and thought I'd use it for a few more casts to fish that stump before I drifted passed it and I ended up catching a decent fish from it, which was this one......

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I may be wrong but I'm thinking if I had changed to the white one, or even something totally different like green or black......I think I'd have still caught that fish off that stump no matter what color it was.

I'm not that good at fishing, I'm beginning to get better though, I can tell, and this type of thinking is where I seem to be going to.

So, do you think color of a lure is gravely important or only slightly important as opposed to the type of lure and how it's fished being more important instead....like crankbait, spinnerbait, plastics, and so on??

Posted
Color is most important to match forage and the water conditions.  

water conditions i guess but i do not think matching the hatch is that important

Posted

Seems to me that whenever I see a spot that looks like it would hold fish, or see them on the fish finder, I cast whatever I happen to have tied on at the time and usually get a strike.  If I miss the hookup that's usually my fault.  Getting anxious too soon and setting the hook like it's a 50 pound catfish instead of a 2 pound bass.  I'm trying to do better on that but I do that a lot it seems.   ;D  But I just noticed that the color usually didn't seem to make a difference, they hit it no matter what it was.  

One time I even switched colors every time I got a fish to see if I had a color they wouldn't hit, inline spinners that is.  I got a fish on every color I had in the box that day.  Really good day for whitebass and hybrids.  

Posted

Color is far more important to the fisherman than the fish ;)

I'll throw anything natural, any time..... and fish it with the same confidence as the previous (natural) color.

Posted

I was talkin color with my partner in the last tourny I fished and he said it didn't really matter since bass couldn't see color anyway, best part of this is he runs a paint and body shop and he is allways doing his own custom paint jobs on lures.

  • Super User
Posted

I think that it is somewhat important in shallow, clear water. The deeper and darker the water is, I don't think it matters as much.

  • Super User
Posted

Although I agree with LBH that color is "generally" not important, there are times when it is critical. When color is important, it's usually an exact shade or accent. Over time, you will run into this on occasion.

As a general rule I like "dark" or white/ silver (natural).

My favorites are green, blue and black, regardless of the water clarity, local baitfish or time of day/ year.

8-)

Posted

I like white too, not sure if it's the color white that is getting the hit or the fact that the fluke it is embedded in is so darn sexy but I like it not for it's catching ability, just about anything will work colorwise but I like it because you get to see the hit in clear water,.....one second it's there, the next second,....it ain't

SET THE HOOK!!!  ;)

So, my point is, I can also see where color CAN be important such as sight fishing but in this instance, again,..., it is only important to the angler, not the fish.

My comments are strictly opinion, I'm sure there are 100 cases to prove me wrong, but that's my schtick and I'm schtickin' to it!  ;D

Posted

Mostly natural is the way I go, but I have a string of private ponds my buddy and I fish, and it seems that anything Yellow (not chartreuse...) gets bit hard.

  • Super User
Posted

I 'm a sucker for brilliantly colored baits, specially with lotz and lotz of metal flake, fish don 't care or seldomly care what color the bait is as long as your location and presentation are right.

Posted

I agree with color not being very important. Location, depth, speed, size, THEN color. Just don't look at my tacklebox without my consent.

Posted

I think the most important aspect of color is getting a bass to see the bait.

Posted

i agree that about 90 percent of the time specific colors do not matter. Natural colors tend to work no matter what.

However there is that 10% exception.

I can think of one great example in which i'm sure that color mattered.  I was shore fishing and fished the same place for 3 days at different times in the day. I was at cabin my family had rented for the week. I was fishing the only place I could, off of the end of the dock and I must have thrown every color and lure that I could in the water. The only color that would get bit was yellow. Different lures types as well. Yellow spinnerbait, yellow crank, and yellow topwater. No other color worked. I probably would have done even better if I had owned yellow worms. So for that week, at that lake, yellow was key.

so does color matter?

The answer is that color never matters, except for those times that it does  ;D

Posted

I agree with Wagn - I think color depends partly on the time of year - right before and right after the spawn - not so much.  Later in the year, it can matter a lot.  There have been too many times when I have seen a slight color change (green pumpkin to watermelon for instance) be the key to getting fish to bite when they won't otherwise.  Color alone isn't THE key, but it is one of the keys.

Posted
I was talkin color with my partner in the last tourny I fished and he said it didn't really matter since bass couldn't see color anyway, best part of this is he runs a paint and body shop and he is allways doing his own custom paint jobs on lures.

1) Bass do see color.

2) Color is definately important but not nearly as important as most people think it is. There are times when it is important to match the hatch exactly but generally speaking color is not as important as lure size, running depth, speed, etc.

  • Super User
Posted

I believe that color is important inasmuch as it enhances lure visibility,

but beyond that I think color becomes angler-intensive.

The best color to use varies constantly throughout the day and may even vary from one cast to the next

if the cover is different (e.g. in the weeds - outside the weeds).

Ironically, matching the color of the prevalent prey may not only be unnecessary,

but may actually work against the angler. Creatures are colored by Mother Nature

to be difficult for predators to detect. Copying Big Mama might be playing into her hands,

because a bass won't strike a lure it can't see.

Roger

Posted
Read Bassmaster article "Lure orLocation"

it doesnt talk directly abut color but the "lure

it is in the May 2008 edition

I would read this but I haven't recieved a magazine since that Pro Guide they sent out in February right before the Classic tournament.  Called them 4 times so far and they said they're looking into it with a trace on my mail and that it will take 4 weeks for me to get all the issues I am missing.  My membership is current through May 2009 too.  Maybe when I get them all I'll be able to check up on it.   >;)

  • Super User
Posted

There are times when color matters

There are times when color does not matter

Only the bass can determine when

When asked why he makes many different color baits Tom Mann answered to catch the fisherman, a bass has never put a penny in my pocket!

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I have a couple color considerations--

Matte v. reflective:  especially with the mann's 1-, I've had times when they wouldn't hit a black/white bait, but they'd hit a black/chrome one.  

Perch v. no perch--if there are perch in  the water i'm fishing, I'm throwing a perch-colored bait 90% of the time.  One pond I fish, early in the season, the fish will only bite perch patterns.  

My visibility--if there's a color I can see easier from above the water that the fish won't mind, I'll use it.

Match the hatch--not a big concern for me, (except for perch), I try to get fairly close, with the other stuff coming first.  For instance, the "Ice" color of 3X jerkbait is a dead-on imitation of the minnows in Walden Pond.  So if they just happen to match up, I'll throw it.

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