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Choosing the right colour jig

Printed From: The Fishing Website
Category: Saltwater Fishing
Forum Name: Heavy Metal - Jig fishing
Forum Description: Anything related to jig fishing here
URL: https://www.fishing.net.nz/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=46116
Printed Date: 11 Jun 2026 at 7:37pm


Topic: Choosing the right colour jig
Posted By: JTF
Subject: Choosing the right colour jig
Date Posted: 17 Oct 2009 at 7:30pm
Just a guide for that right choice of jig on the day


Color Filtration in Water
Water filters light. And since all color is actually colored light, water will filter colors. Certain colors cannot be seen below certain depths because light is broken apart when it hits the water and certain wavelengths (colors) are filtered out. The severity of this filter depends on the clarity of the water, wind conditions, time of day and lure depth; dirty water, high winds, deep water, and evening hours mean fewer colors. To understand these effects, we must first understand the relationship between light and water.

The colors of the spectrum (the colors of light) are Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, and Violet. A mixture of all of these colors produces white. If an angler were to stand in the center of a very deep lake and shine a bright light into it, the colors within the light beam would gradually disappear as it traveled toward the bottom. At 10 feet, red is almost gone, orange is disappearing, and yellow is starting to fade away. At 35 feet, orange is gone, and yellow is quickly disappearing. At 75 feet, yellow looks greenish-blue and the only visible colors are blue, indigo and violet. As we pass 150 feet, blue and indigo are hard to see and violet is disappearing. At a few hundred feet, ultraviolet is the only color left, and it is not visible to the human eye anyway.



Neon colors, however, do not disappear when the spectrum colors do. This is because they "fluoresce", meaning that they glow when hit by ultraviolet light. We have heard reports of brightly visible fluorescent pink and yellow colors at depths of 125 feet and deeper!

Keep in mind, however, that these water color filtration rates assume that the water is crystal clear. Pollutants, sediment, and wind can drastically affect these numbers by rearranging the filtration order and decreasing the overall depths of all colors. Under these circumstances, red-orange seems to be the most visible, assuming that your lure depth is not greater than 20 feet. That said, here are some tips from anglers on how to pick lure color:

Super Clear: White or clear. Use glitter for color. All colors are visible to 10 feet.
Clear Water:
Blue is most visible. White is visible. All colors are slightly visible to 10 feet.
Green Water: Green is most visible.
Stained Water: Orange, green, and chartreuse are most visible. Red is slightly visible.
Muddy Water: Red is most visible.

Here are some additional suggestions to help with low light (first light until sunup), medium light (sunup until the sun reaches 20 degrees to the horizon), and high light (from 20 degrees to the opposite horizon) conditions:

Low Light: Blue, purple or black work best. Use with silver flash.
Medium Light: Red and orange work best.
High Light: Brown or gray work best. Use with fluorescent accents.


NOTE: When the light level falls below 0.1 foot candle (clear night, no moon), all colors become just shades of gray and cannot be seen by the fish.



 










Replies:
Posted By: Boulder
Date Posted: 17 Oct 2009 at 7:35pm
Good info there Jimi> Did you get my package??
Better include some violet in my jigs as 150ft is only 45m and about half what we usually jig at white and Tairua


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Posted By: JTF
Date Posted: 17 Oct 2009 at 7:38pm
Yes,sorry i was meant to call you yesterday,MarkE jigs also arrived.
Yes purple seems to be popular.


Posted By: brown
Date Posted: 17 Oct 2009 at 7:59pm
some interesting info there jimi


Posted By: Ritual Groove Meister
Date Posted: 17 Oct 2009 at 10:33pm
Hmmmm makes you think those pink and red ones gonna vanish pretty soon. But, I've seen colours get hit in the oranges and greens in 80 - 100m, So, I dunno.

Does anyone have preference on colours at different grounds, sun conditions, harbours etc. I usually fish with only one other person jigging, if that,  so it's hard to know what colours are optimum for the time, place and situation. Purple is proving to be popular thou. Usually do pretty good with greens and golds in the harbour too.

What about white, notice Jimi you are painting a few up white. Off the spectrum?


Posted By: JTF
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 12:09am
The kings down this way(West coast) feed up on Arrow squid,usually quite shallow and some times near the surface.


Posted By: Kojack
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 2:29am
A right little scholar your are Jig farther Thumbs UpThumbs Up. To be honest this colour information is a little beyond me. You just keep doing what your are because your customised jigs are working for me.As for the rest on the market I will say know more as I do not want to start world war three WinkWink.

Bloody good information JTF thanks for sharing.


Posted By: Kojack
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 3:16am
Just going back threw some old posts JTF, Seems you have been at this for some time Jig father.

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Jimi the Fish is probably NZ's best jig fisherman and he often custom paints his Zest jigs.  Favourite colour?  Yep....BLACK! 

Now I appreciate you sending me up the top one in the photo, but come on how about the second one down with the greenstone affect.

Bring it on JTF as I am looking forward to seeing your latest versions in black and one or two in greenstone would be nice.Cool




Posted By: hookerpuka
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 6:23am
interesting how orange disappears early yet seems to produce the goods for puka and kings at depth. Jimi do you think that perhaps fish perceive colour in a different way to us humans, maybe seeing it as shades ?


Posted By: Nuthead
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 8:36am
If orange dissapears early, how come all the grand daddy Hapuka, ruby eye, red snapper and all those other **** fish we pick up in 200m of water are red/orange in colour?


Posted By: Carbine
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 8:45am
because that makes them invisible lol. Awesome post jimi learnt heaps - now to raid kojaks stash of jimi jigs Evil Smile


Posted By: Falco
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 8:52am

In the case of how humans see,the colour is still there it is just the light is not-shine a torch on an object that appers dull and you will see brilliant colours "re-appear",turn the torch off and you will see different hues grey,violet;.

When diving beyond 20m everything becomes a grey,blue,violet hue-but object dont become invisible..LOL...you just see a different shade of them.
Diving in crystal clean water to 50m you still have plenty of light just not enough to expose all the cool coulrs that are there.
I think the main thing fish would see out of all this (given they see like us) is contrast in lighter coulor jigs,patterns are not effected,and purples and black will stick out like dog nuts..
 
If fish see the same as us and rely on light then perhaps the ****fish's perfect coulr for the deep is red? less visible to predators?


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Posted By: JTF
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 2:43pm
Originally posted by Nuthead Nuthead wrote:

If orange dissapears early, how come all the grand daddy Hapuka, ruby eye, red snapper and all those other **** fish we pick up in 200m of water are red/orange in colour?

My guess for that Shane would be the Hydro phonics that these jigs where designed for,the Sanmi is a good example of that as is the popular curved slider,you also have the noise of the assist hook and whatever lumo is on the jig.


Posted By: JigNut
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 2:50pm
It was interesting that Don and Greg from Sportfishing.NZ had a seminar about just this topic at Kapiti boating Club with regards to Softbait colour and how to make your softbait selection due to water clarity and depth.
 
Some very good oilWink


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Posted By: Nuthead
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 3:15pm
what I meant Jimi was that the fish are red/orange in colour, not the jig.  But 'Pukas and Bass have got massive eyeballs, who are we to say what they see.


Posted By: JTF
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 3:22pm
Id say sound would be the key
BYW i sent you your request on F/book


Posted By: Bushpig
Date Posted: 18 Oct 2009 at 7:02pm
Seen a mate get his thumb ripped apart by a cray at 30 metres. The blood was green in color at that depth 

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Posted By: otter
Date Posted: 19 Oct 2009 at 4:03pm
sound and vibes as well as lumo are the only things that matter down deep  the only colour would be the colour eluminated by the lumo    so if you have 2 exact the same jigs lets say orange and lumo and red and lumo and you get the bites only on the orange ones than the lumo lighting up the jig in combination with sound and vibes is what puka will go for


Posted By: yellow tail
Date Posted: 20 Oct 2009 at 5:22pm
that was a mean read mate, where on the net do you find this stuff?? cheers



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