Fithla Junior Member
Joined: 17 May 2026 Posts: 1
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Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 5:31 am Post subject: How easy is to make a good (better) fiddle? |
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I started playing the fiddle six months ago and used one I bought for the kids. But there are a few notes that sometimes drive me nuts. I've tried changing the bridge, strings and moving the sound post without success, so I'm thinking I need another fiddle ... or it's my technique.
First idea was to find another second hand one "needing attention" and try to fix it up. That way I could at least try it first to see what it sounded like ... but by the time I'd signed up to this the fiddle I was looking at had been sold.
I had also been wondering if it might be more sensible just to go the whole hog and make one. I found a company in the UK doing kits, but there were no reviews and at £600 ... with "all the tools needed" ... but only three clamps ... which didn't fill me with confidence, I began wondering if it was just a cheap Chinese kit with a few extra thrown in to make it sound better.
Maybe I should buy a really cheap kit ... and use it for practice?
The only way to really know what I'm getting is probably buy the wood and then carve it myself, but that requires me to make all the templates and when I add it up, I'd have to invest a lot of time and money with no guarantee of success. And whilst I'd love to do it, it's going to take time away from learning the fiddle.
So what are the chances that a competent carpenter will be able to produce something better than a student violin from a reputable company (Stentor). |
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