Very nice contours and flame there, Geoff.
Jamie
Very nice contours and flame there, Geoff.
Jamie
There are two things to aim at in life: first, to get what you want; and, after that, to enjoy it. Only the wisest of mankind achieve the second. Logan Pearsall Smith, 1865 - 1946
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Dan Voight
http://www.mandolinsessions.com/?p=671 Mel Bay Interview
dan@danvoightmandolins.com
www.danvoightmandolins.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Voight...37319912963274 Voight Mandolins Facebook
Dan Voight
http://www.mandolinsessions.com/?p=671 Mel Bay Interview
dan@danvoightmandolins.com
www.danvoightmandolins.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Voight...37319912963274 Voight Mandolins Facebook
Buffing day.
Gorgeous work Jim!!
I am very glad there are eight holes in that headstock and not four...Otherwise I'd be having a serious attack of TGAS right now!![]()
Plays bass guitar, tenor guitar, guitar, and mandolin for 'The R.u.B.'
"I know it's only rock-n-roll, but I like it." - Mick Jagger & Keith Richards
"Life is too important to be taken seriously." - Oscar Wilde
Gear: The Current Cast of Characters
Nice Jim! What tuners are you going to put on this?
Wavs
OUCH Jim. That's so sweet it hurts my teeth. Love that headstock too.
Dan's also. Tortoise. WOW.
Gary
vincit qui se vincit
You can get infinite combinations of boring tools from suppliers like MSC, you just have to figure out what works. I have a pretty good selection, but the one Stew Mac supplies for Wavs also works pretty well for Grovers. They're a little loose when you first drill them but after finish they snug right up.
Wow Jim, You have really got the mandolin building thing down. I bet it'll sound great! Good to see your on top of things as well, Dan, looking good. I know yours will sound great as well.
Gus, if you want to see who has mandolin building down go have a look at that latest Fletcher Brock F-5. That should have 3 pages of comments.
Ummm...quilt!
This is like one of those pictures where if you stared at it cross-eyed you could see a horse or ship or something. But here you have to look for the "inny" and outy" sides.
I did use Photoshop to up the contrast but when you use a plane on this stuff it really shows up good.
wow, that quilt is crazy nice.
Sanding this one today...........
Lauri Girouard
www.GirouardMandolins.com
Unbelievable depth like topographical maps of the trees interior.
Deciderius Erasmus "In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is King".
I don't know if I should call that piece quilt or flamed. Most unique piece of Big Leaf we have come across. Here is another interesting detail of how the grain lines on the sides almost match up to the grain lines on the neck................
Lauri Girouard
www.GirouardMandolins.com
Nice detail Lauri. You guy's are really putting out some nice stuff.
Thanks Charles!
Here is a mando we are about to finish up. It will be a "house demo" mandolin so anyone in the area, feel free to give us a ring or shoot us an email to come give it a spin. Sitka top and birdseye maple back sides and neck. We also plan to bring it to Grey Fox this year.
That's some sweet looking birdseye. Nice staining job.
Steve Sorensen
Sorensen Mandolin & Guitar Co.
www.sorensenstrings.com
"On the Bench Today" updates on Facebook
I'm extremely partial to redheads...See you turned their world upside down as well. Nice!
Kip...
If you think you can or think you can't... you're likely right!
Here are some pictures of my latest project. A production optimized mandolin that will sell for a relatively low price, but still retain some important features. A couple of the odd or interesting things about the design are:
The sides are laminated out of three layers of the same wood as the back and neck with a maccassar Ebony center stripe. Sometimes a curly maple layer for contrast. This rim is very dimensionally stable and very strong.
The rims also very easy for me to make using the strap winch and fire hose + compressed air contraption seen below.
The top and back are joined via the neck and heel blocks, which index positively together within a thousandth of an inch.
Dovetails are tested and neck angles verified before any assembly. Then the sides are "wrapped" around the top and back. The top plate color coats can be sprayed before the neck is mounted if needed.
Also, there is no kerfing. The plates have a smooth radius down to the rims. Makes it look really clean inside and, in theory, is beneficial to volume and tone.
It does make my free-plate tap tuning frequencies a little different than usual but I do my important adjustments on false rim fixtures anyway.
More to come later this week as I finish the first two instruments.
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Last edited by Marty Jacobson; Jul-03-2012 at 9:24am.
martinjacobson.com - Dedicated to producing affordable instruments with great tone & playability
Nice, I really like that neck joint, and that stripe in the fretboard is way cool!
Martin, I can see that you are an industrial designer. Your site is interesting beyond just instruments. Your Basilisk mandolin is certainly striking. Are there unusual structural aspects to that or to the building of it?
Jim
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Playing lately:
Brentrup A4C -- 1915 Frank Merwin Ashley violin -- 1904 Embergher Type 3 -- 1937 Gibson L-Century -- 1939 Gibson L-00 -- ca. 1890s Celebrated Benary Banjo -- 1985 Monteleone Grand Artist Mandola
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