Know what I said about inconsistent lures? It wasn't about lure quality - that
must be consistent to catch fish along with another important detail:
one or more details that attract fish. The detail I'm taking about is the
thin flat tail attached to Mo Magic, Jason's Crappie Flopper and my hand pour. When it comes to Jason's Flopper, the ribbed body is for the sake of fishermen and sales,
not fish. MO grubs work as well with a smooth body
because of the thin tail and
nothing more. The tail must be thin enough
always.
You and I know all will work regardless of inconsistent color or shape. As far as selling them, my caveat to the buyer would be -
no guarantees when it comes to non-molded lures. I would only sell baits I know work for many species and that
fish are fish, whether domestic or swimming in Japan. Anyone who buys the idea that fish differ depending on which region they swim in, have got issues and I assume are prone to believing in things like wearing unwashed lucky underwear when they go fishing.

I've given my lures to friends and all have done extremely well catching sport fish and pan fish, but only after I gave them a lesson about finesse jig presentation. In fact much of the time the
wrong presentation (technique) negates the best lure designs. One must complement the other or it will seem like the bait is crap when it rarely gets bit.
Again, I can give lures to people, but I can't be there to be sure
how they use them. One angler I gave mine to who lives in another states
trolls for crappie 99% of the time.
Duh! No wonder they didn't work; just don't blame it on the lure! Another misguided belief about a lure's ability is the body of water. Some lakes suffer from poor quality fishing for many reasons I won't go into. A great lure won't catch many fish in those lakes that don't hold a good population of fish to begin with (one comes to mind locally).
My advice to anyone regarding ideas that don't mesh with established biases,
try it you may like it and you'll never know until you do.You're right about the risks of smoking a pipe. Been smoking a pipe since I was 22 and now I'm 67 with no lung problems or oral cancer - yet; breathing in the fumes from hot melted plastic doesn't help either. Good thing I don't smoke often - a dozen times a week or less and some weeks not at all. (Reminds me - I got to reorder about 10 of my favorite tobacco flavors.

)