Re: Woodworking question.

2005-04-04 Thread Herbert Ward
> The suggestions for stringing it seem to go beyond what you are looking for, > but they have a point. How do you know if you are in the right place. And I glued some twine onto the fingerboard. When the glue dries, I'll have hard ridges to represent courses. This is easy, cheap, sturdy, comp

Re: Woodworking question.

2005-04-04 Thread Herbert Ward
> ... on a bus sounds might not be allowed ... Indeed, the bus rules say "do not play musical instruments". > than nothing and a long bus ride may be just the time to > practice left hand part. I have in mind an very nice exercise well-suited to my mock-up's wooden immovable "strings". In fact

Re: Woodworking question.

2005-04-01 Thread Christopher Schaub
Actually, it's pretty difficult to fly to Europe with a 10c lute. The size restrictions can be very tough. I just heard a horror story about a lute having to be checked in a US trans-continental flight! The horrors. The venues in the US are generally terrible for lutes anyway so maybe an amplified

Re: Woodworking question.

2005-04-01 Thread Tim Beasley
It sounds more and more like you want a lute-Soloette. Jon's getting you real close to it. If you'll willing to all the trouble of using wrest pins and fixing a nut/saddle of some type, why not just build a mock-up lute? Fix the strings at one end, get a couple sets of cheap guitar tuners off

Re: Woodworking question.

2005-03-31 Thread Jon Murphy
Herbert, As an inveterate "jig" builder I agree with the other answers. But will add my own. If you are dealing with plain old pine stud you don't need a sharp draw knife (which costs money), a good sharp hunting knife or such will allow you to whittle it to a gross size (the wood isn't hard). The

Re: Woodworking question.

2005-03-29 Thread Dr. Marion Ceruti
: lute list Subject: Re: Woodworking question. I agree, without the strings you will get no feel for where the fingers are going or the back pressure you have to contend with. Frankly though, I think your problem is greater than that. One of the difficulties with the Lute is support of the neck without

Re: Woodworking question.

2005-03-28 Thread Vance Wood
ether so they more or less function as one. Vance Wood. - Original Message - From: "Dr. Marion Ceruti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "'Herbert Ward'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "lute list" Cc: "Garry Bryan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]&g

RE: Woodworking question.

2005-03-28 Thread Dr. Marion Ceruti
rd' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, lute list Subject: RE: Woodworking question. 11" Draw knife. Very sharp. Doesn't take very much time. Scrape to desired smoothness using a piece of broken glass. Tape the glass with duct tape where you want to hold it or tape all but the edge you'

RE: Woodworking question.

2005-03-28 Thread Garry Bryan
ram method: Buy an automatic lute neck forming tool. I'm sure such a device must exist at the New Yankee Workshop >:) > -Original Message- > From: Herbert Ward [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, March 28, 2005 10:21 AM > To: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu > Subject: W

Woodworking question.

2005-03-28 Thread Herbert Ward
I want to make a mock-up of a lute neck, so I can practice while riding a bus. There'll be no strings, no pegbox, and no soundboard. Just 14 inches of "neck", with some ridges glued on to represent strings, and maybe a support scheme (like a handle). My question is, what is the best way to shap