I open up the 100 dollar violin

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 07. 2020
  • Master Violin Maker Olaf Grawert opens up the $100 violin. What he finds inside is unbelievable...
    And he has seen a lot of unusual violins in his nearly 35 yeas as a violinmaker.
    Find out what makes the $100 violin sound the way it does.
    #myviolinmaker, #olafgrawertviolin
    Website:
    www.olafgrawertviolinstudio.com
    Social:
    / olafgrawertviolinstudio
    / olafgrawertviolinstudi...
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 746

  • @YayHappens
    @YayHappens Před 4 lety +209

    Olaf this information about the summer and winter grains of wood and how that works for the top plate is really fascinating! I love little bits of info like this. Thank you!

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Před 4 lety +19

      Thank you

    • @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379
      @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379 Před 4 lety +4

      Agree! I really love learning interesting tidbits like that.

    • @jimothysparkcus
      @jimothysparkcus Před 4 lety +3

      That was super informative! No wonder so many top end acoustic guitars have sitka spruce tops.

    • @wyzonzebedee5556
      @wyzonzebedee5556 Před 3 lety +16

      I don't want to sound pedantic here but the growth rings are a combination of cells that are laid down in the spring and the summer, not winter. Trees, other than those in tropical areas where conditions are similar throughout the year, do not grow in winter. The trees go into a dormant phase. When growth starts in spring cells are laid down relatively quickly and the light part of the growth ring is formed. This is the springwood. Cells are laid down more slowly in summer and these form the dark part - summer wood. An annual growth 'ring' is a combination of these light and dark cells - one layer of springwood and one layer of summerwood.
      Fexibility along the grain is determined by the length of the cells that are laid down. In spruce these are relatively long, hence its relative strength. Wood cells in ash, elm and poplar are also relatively long, hence their use in spokes for cart wheels and snooker cues (ash), wooden (not MDF!!) coffins which are shaped (elm), and matches which have to resist snapping when struck (poplar). Trees that do grow in the tropics may not have spring and summerwood like temperate species, but still do produce 'rings' as growth rates vary throughout the year, though they may not be very distinct. Some species like eucalyptus have a 'resting' phase each year even though conditions for growth may be conducive. And finally the term 'sap rising' is a bit misleading. In any tree free water or sap is found in the cells in the cambium - the actively growing tissue below the bark - and is there all the time. It does not rise and fall depending on the season. The more accurate term would be 'sap flow'. It flows fastest in spring, slower in the summer, and there is hardly any flow, if at all, in winter.
      Lecture over!! I really enjoy these videos and it is great information for when I make my first fiddle. Thank you Olaf.

    • @jasonli2974
      @jasonli2974 Před 3 lety

      @@wyzonzebedee5556 I thought that spruce was a coniferous tree and didn’t lose its needles. Does it also go into a dormant phase in the winter?

  • @anastylos2812
    @anastylos2812 Před 4 lety +601

    If you can glue it slowly, you can glue it quickly.

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Před 4 lety +164

      If you can glue it quickly...
      You can glue it quicker!

    • @lyphebliss7278
      @lyphebliss7278 Před 4 lety +14

      Ask Olaf the Violinmaker, lmao xD

    • @wanrazul
      @wanrazul Před 4 lety +4

      @@AskOlaftheViolinmaker 12:16 reminds me of Prince Charles'Bluebottle impression here czcams.com/video/IfhC587Wiik/video.html

    • @wakingtheworld
      @wakingtheworld Před 2 lety

      Nice one!

    • @Mieun1011
      @Mieun1011 Před 2 lety

      Lol

  • @fierywomanpacnw7004
    @fierywomanpacnw7004 Před 4 lety +29

    Winter grain, summer grain: utterly fascinating! Thanks for such interesting information.

  • @AndyZach
    @AndyZach Před 4 lety +98

    Sacrilegious!
    For those who don't know, VSO=violin-shaped object. Never was there a better acronym for this particular VSO.

    • @sorrenblitz805
      @sorrenblitz805 Před 3 lety +1

      I mean it IS a violin, it's just also a poop from a butt.

    • @brymusic1542
      @brymusic1542 Před 3 lety +5

      That's really funny. Reminds of what we call "food" from cheap Mexican restaurants here in the American Southwest: "Taco flavored hunger suppressants."

    • @eddavidson3051
      @eddavidson3051 Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you! I’ve been a violinist for 45 yrs and had never heard the term “VSO” before!

    • @carlosmacmartin4205
      @carlosmacmartin4205 Před 11 měsíci

      There's really no point in polishing a turd. LOL

  • @f1f1s
    @f1f1s Před 4 lety +72

    Even when Olaf is trying to play the bossy character, he still sounds timid. What a truly kind person, he can’t impersonate bad people.

    • @martinroeeidhammer9108
      @martinroeeidhammer9108 Před rokem +1

      I suspect Olaf to be of Norwegian descent, We Norwegians are timid, but kind people😀

    • @angelikafranz4545
      @angelikafranz4545 Před rokem +3

      ​@@martinroeeidhammer9108 As I know, he has German ancesters.

    • @martinroeeidhammer9108
      @martinroeeidhammer9108 Před rokem +1

      @@angelikafranz4545 I am sorry. Somehow i thought he was of Norwegian descent.

    • @MrDanisve
      @MrDanisve Před 11 měsíci

      @@martinroeeidhammer9108 He would probably be named Olav if he was from the nordic countries :P
      Hmm, not sure i would say Norwegians are kind. They are polite, but not kind.
      Typical example of difference between kind/polite:
      Like in eastern USA, people are kind but rude. If you have a flat wheel on your car, they will tell you how stupid you are for not having a jack. But will help you. They are often kind.
      If you move to the southern states. People will say "Oh no, thats bad luck. Ill pray for you" but wont help you. They are polite, but not kind.
      Norwegians excell at conflict avoidance and a fear of social disaproval. Hard to be the black sheep in Norway same as Japan. One is expected to follow the mass.

    • @martinroeeidhammer9108
      @martinroeeidhammer9108 Před 11 měsíci

      @@MrDanisve Interesting to see that what was meant as a joking comment turned into a deep analysis of us Norwegians. Well, that's the internet. I can live with that 🙂

  • @herr_barus
    @herr_barus Před 4 lety +201

    Well, you can sell it to a stock photo agency... They don't even care if their models are holding the instrument right.

    • @zwz.zdenek
      @zwz.zdenek Před 4 lety +6

      Yes and no. Some customers, especially those paying $500+ for a single photo, might be discerning. But if it's for a mainstream ad or a movie, they will put the most deceiving fakery in there.

    • @herr_barus
      @herr_barus Před 4 lety +6

      @@zwz.zdenek www.google.com/search?q=violin+stock+photo

    • @eldricgrubbidge6465
      @eldricgrubbidge6465 Před 4 lety

      Sometimes the violinists in publicity photos have huge long fake nails.

    • @Kimoto504
      @Kimoto504 Před 4 lety +1

      Or if it has a bridge... or if the bow is before or after the bridge... Or if the bow is relatively straight across the strings...

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Před 4 lety +6

      Enrico Friedrich As amazing as those stock photos are, they can’t hold a candle (or, indeed, a flaming violin) to the stock photos of people soldering. (Ok, actually they can, but then a perfectly good pun would have gone unused. All the same, electronics repair stock photos tend to be a dumpster fire of hilariously staged randomness while holding parts and tools in nonsensical combinations. But the take home message is of course to always hold the soldering iron by the heated working end, not the handle... 😂)

  • @mynx_uk
    @mynx_uk Před 4 lety +16

    i allways have a manic grin on my face when Olaf opens up any violin, i will be taking an angled mirror when i next buy a new violin.

  • @laralovesviolins6510
    @laralovesviolins6510 Před 4 lety +13

    The $100 violin sounded much better than I thought it would!

  • @shadowgolem9158
    @shadowgolem9158 Před 4 lety +52

    The sound of the VSO makes me think of the sound plywood topped guitars make. Not much harmonic complexity and very heavy in the higher register and lower register is mostly missing.
    Edit: LOL and it IS plywood! I'll have to watch all the way thru before commenting next time. 😂

  • @microslavery
    @microslavery Před 4 lety +129

    Reminds me of cheap homes, where the bulk of attention to detail comes at the very end, to hide all the inexpensive shortcuts and cheapness that will fall apart in short order. My father once did a tour of such a house, and when he pointed out that he could feel a breeze in front of a closed doorway, they mentioned that they could change that - like air leaking through doorways was a feature.

    • @Kimoto504
      @Kimoto504 Před 4 lety +3

      Property developers...

    • @massimookissed1023
      @massimookissed1023 Před 4 lety +16

      That's aerodynamics, ~ helps the house go faster.

    • @ananda_miaoyin
      @ananda_miaoyin Před 4 lety +4

      NEVER buy the models. They are built first and have all of the fuck ups! I built many track homes....what an experience that was. My house was built in 1965 when they still used true dimension wood, six inch walls and heavy iron pipe. Anything that is ´´master planned´´ and built after 2000 will fail quickly....cough, cough...Chinese drywall...

    • @J.C...
      @J.C... Před 11 měsíci +2

      That can happen in any house, cheap or not. All it takes is a lazy door hanger. Having expensive doors doesn't keep it from happening.

    • @nomore6167
      @nomore6167 Před 10 měsíci

      @@J.C... "Having expensive doors doesn't keep it from happening" - I don't think the OP was implying that expensive doors would prevent the air leak, in that example. I think he was saying specifically that the builder didn't pay attention to the details when building the house, thus the "shortcuts" and lack of attention to detail led to inexpensive and cheap-quality labor, which resulted in the air leak (as opposed to building the house properly, paying attention to details, which would have increased the labor cost).

  • @randomslomo1875
    @randomslomo1875 Před 4 lety +12

    I never thought "plywood" and "violin" would be in the same video...

  • @mandolinic
    @mandolinic Před 4 lety +54

    You should have paid the extra $20 for the factory-fitted dust ball ;-)

  • @stevev5510
    @stevev5510 Před 4 lety +108

    Hi Olaf,
    I'd love to see more of the interior of some really fine violins. I recently saw the light in my daughter's eyes as she tried some better instruments after playing on VSO's

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Před 4 lety +23

      I'm definitely planning to do that

    • @isaiahmcclure8894
      @isaiahmcclure8894 Před 2 lety

      haha me too, my first violin was only around 300 hundred USD, upon playing my new violin (a little over 1000USD, still not expensive in terms of instruments) My mind was blown

  • @eliz_scubavn
    @eliz_scubavn Před 4 lety +98

    Interesting that hide glues are used for violins, as they’re similarly used in art restorations for much the same reason that it’s reversible.

    • @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379
      @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379 Před 4 lety +8

      Are you a fellow Baumgartner fan? 😊

    • @eliz_scubavn
      @eliz_scubavn Před 4 lety +12

      Cynthia Verjovsky Marcotte Of course! What could be better than fish skin glue and Belgian linen?

    • @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379
      @cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379 Před 4 lety +2

      @@eliz_scubavn right??

    • @rosin_eater
      @rosin_eater Před 3 lety +1

      @@cynthiaverjovskymarcotte1379 :0

    • @mrz80
      @mrz80 Před 11 měsíci

      Similarly, the neck joints on better acoustic guitars are often done with hide glue, so that neck resets are marginally less painful for the repair guys.

  • @lynnccm1442
    @lynnccm1442 Před 4 lety +12

    While I find it difficult to watch you take it apart, I am fascinated by how the insides look. Thank you Olaf, for educating us.🥰

  • @patrickdillon8554
    @patrickdillon8554 Před 4 lety +59

    I was going to suggest that you try to make a violin out of a shelf but looks like someone already has lol, I suppose you could make an electric violin out of it lol

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Před 4 lety +14

      Yes, electric could definitely work

    • @KaidoLP
      @KaidoLP Před 4 lety

      David Hilowitz made a cello and 2 violins, they actually sound ok, taking their materials and shape in to account

  • @fnersch3367
    @fnersch3367 Před 4 lety +20

    They lied. That's a VSO and is not a violin. I bought one of these broken ($5) and glued it back together after resculpting the top plate to Schladni's principles. It sounds great. Remaking junk good is fun!

  • @paulbecket7399
    @paulbecket7399 Před 4 lety +19

    just the fact that it's made of plywood explains why the instrument sounded so "muddy" having the grains of the wood bring crossed one way and then the next layer being at right angles to the first would stop the plates from vibrating properly

    • @markfisher7962
      @markfisher7962 Před 2 lety

      Yes, I expect that the plywood damps a lot of the vibration. A flitch of old growth growth spruce will ring if tapped.

  • @conchobar
    @conchobar Před 4 lety +125

    After your setup, that VSO wasn't as awful sounding as the price would suggest. Yet, when you removed that top plate, and compared it with properly made instruments, I can't fathom someone watching this video and afterward still wanting to invest in such a poorly made device. Thanks for opening our eyes.

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Před 4 lety +58

      Thank you for the feedback... that's so nice to hear.
      Us violin makers often get so frustrated seeing enthusiastic little violinist struggle against VSO's thinkingthat they can't play... the worst thing is when they give up... just breaks my heart.
      It's one of the reasons I made these 3 videos.

    • @JasperJanssen
      @JasperJanssen Před 4 lety +9

      I mean, the converse is that buying a violin for a hundred bucks is pretty much the equivalent of picking up the candy next to the cash register - impulse purchase. Not really “invest in”.

    • @glenntozser817
      @glenntozser817 Před 4 lety +7

      @@AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      You are SO RIGHT.
      You get, especially a child a crap instrument and it ruins them from wanting to play music.
      I became a professional bass player because at 10years old the cheap guitar I had was SO BAD I thought there was something wrong with me that I couldn't push down all the strings - so I went to playing bass where I (basically) had to play only one string at a time.
      (Tho at least I really enjoy playing the bass! 😁)

    • @brattingprincess
      @brattingprincess Před 4 lety

      Ask Olaf the Violinmaker Yes! Schools need to stock the 3-400 violins.

    • @Native_love
      @Native_love Před 3 lety

      Yeah he made is sound very decent for a $100 violin. Makes you wonder how good his violins sound.Nice work!

  • @benykid1
    @benykid1 Před 4 lety +8

    Can you please do a build series on making a new violin from start to finish. That would be really interesting to watch.

  • @shoham2792
    @shoham2792 Před 4 lety +18

    I got a new violin a few days ago and before that I had one of these cheap instruments. it was so hard to make a good sound, let alone different techniques. the violin I have now sounds better and works so much better i wish I got it in the first place.

  • @puutans
    @puutans Před 4 lety +17

    I was curious about the inside of these violins, so thank you!
    This was very educational. The explanation of how the wood moves was very interesting!

  • @nupsiwulst9946
    @nupsiwulst9946 Před 4 lety +22

    Wow. This was shocking indeed 😮 - and fascinating. Thank you!
    Also, completely off topic: when cleaning my violin after practice, I found myself singing „wiping down my violin, removing all the bad dirt, and don’t forget that spot here, cause Olaf said so“ to the melody of ‚why don’t you say so‘... 🤦🏽‍♀️ (the Debussy version, naturally...)
    You have a good influence on us. 🤓 - it’s nice to have you back. 💕

  • @the_red_piano455
    @the_red_piano455 Před 4 lety +9

    11:20 if brett and eddy saw this... sacrilegious

  • @speedbird-ro7dm
    @speedbird-ro7dm Před 4 lety +31

    That inside of the $100 violin is sacrilegious.
    13:05

  • @acornhousepear4483
    @acornhousepear4483 Před 3 lety +7

    I got a cheap mendini for around 70-80 dollars. It was surprisingly well made and sounded great. I’ve had it for around 2 years now and it works great. I looked inside it with a camera as best as I could and everything was in place.

  • @WhatAboutTheBee
    @WhatAboutTheBee Před 4 lety +34

    Every material has a modulus of elasticity. When the material is formed into a shape, we can determine its natural resonant frequency. Consider a perfectly shaped violin top plate made of stainless steel. The modulus of elasticity is much higher (stiffer) and so the natural resonant frequency will be higher. Get the perfect material but shape it improperly, and the NRF changes with the shape.
    It is completely unsurprising that a lamination of wood and glue, with alternating grain direction, has a different modulus of elasticity. The modal shapes will be quite altered, and the change in the NRF will change the sound.
    VSO indeed. Well explained Olaf.

    • @SidneyCritic
      @SidneyCritic Před 4 lety +5

      Spoken like a true engineer. It might not be that simple because different shapes will have different internal reflected sound wave distances, and that might make it sound different.

    • @WhatAboutTheBee
      @WhatAboutTheBee Před 4 lety +4

      @@SidneyCritic Hi Sidney. Yes, a differently shaped object will have different modal shapes. Even seemingly minute differences can have dramatic effects. Finite Element Analysis can illustrate this beautifully. And yes, engineer here.

    • @oliviapereira364
      @oliviapereira364 Před 4 lety +1

      Do you think it's possible that the horrible looking resonance bar actually helps the VSO resonate better than a decent resonance bar would? I mean, could it be that making plywood resonate as much as it can is actually less pleasant for the ears than resonating it not so much (so that its bad sound isn't amplifyed, if you know what I mean)?

    • @WhatAboutTheBee
      @WhatAboutTheBee Před 4 lety

      @@oliviapereira364 Hi Olivia. The resonance bar is likely made of plywood, just as the rest of the VSO is. Speculating how that individual part would "improve" the sound is meaningless.

    • @Dartagnan65
      @Dartagnan65 Před 4 lety

      Aluminium "resonator" violin. (!) - 1932 Aluminum Musical Instruments Co. Violin
      czcams.com/video/0z9TqXgywRM/video.html

  • @feb5th
    @feb5th Před 4 lety +9

    At least we know why it only cost you $100 to buy. With that wood, it probably cost them $10 to make!

  • @torbennielsen7529
    @torbennielsen7529 Před 4 lety +8

    John Malkovich could play you as the mad violin maker

  • @gapdragon01
    @gapdragon01 Před 4 lety +2

    "That's not how you make a violin." LOVED IT!!!!

  • @caffeinhoney3563
    @caffeinhoney3563 Před 4 lety +9

    Little note on what you said at about 14:23 on winter and summer grain. Maybe for simplicity’s sake you cut a few corners, but I learned that wood does not grow in winter, so the darker lines (winter grain) are the ones the tree makes in late summer and fall to stabilize the growth it had in spring and summer (the lighter lines (summer grain)). Alpine spruce has, for the more difficult environment, less summer grain and thus it is harder (the dark lines are always the same thickness).
    But very good content, I really enjoy our videos.

    • @arii414
      @arii414 Před 4 lety

      It depends on the climate. There's places where the summer is too hot and the trees are just trying to not die (they even get rid of some leaves like in fall in other places). Then in fall and winter they grow and get new leafs because that's the seasons when there is some rain.

  • @mousetoad7040
    @mousetoad7040 Před 4 lety +17

    Some VSO's can be used as fiddles. I've seen primitive fiddles that are box shaped, made from cigar boxes, etc. The players don't hold them right and the scratchy sound fits the style of the music and player's style. Also can be used outdoors in less than ideal humidity and weather for campfire mountain music.

    • @paulmcg8237
      @paulmcg8237 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Totally agree, these little boxes have their place.

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor Před 9 měsíci

      No-ones saying they don't have their place. But you're not going to be playing in an classical orchestra with a cheap fiddle. And, when you going into that type of music, you wouldn't get anywhere unless you have a good instrument. And a good violin repays the investment and servicing of it, by its sound, which is fuller, rounder, and more lush.

    • @paulmcg8237
      @paulmcg8237 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Kind of a silly statement you've made there. Of course you are correct, but even a pub session amateur wouldn't touch such a cheap instrument. Their purpose is to give someone who has never played before a cheap introduction to the fiddle, that's it, nothing more. And BTW, almost all of these review videos out there are slating these "VSO's" and telling people not to go near them, which, IMO, is wrong. I think I've only seen one video where the reviewer tells the honest truth, that although the the quality of sound is very poor, it holds a tune and are handy for complete beginners, it's how I started.@@BigHenFor

  • @chrisvighagen
    @chrisvighagen Před 4 lety +2

    "If you can glue it slow, you can glue it fast" is it? Love this video, it really is a great buyers be aware video.

  • @karinaurelia1258
    @karinaurelia1258 Před 4 lety +15

    I got scared when you role played firing the 'luthier' but the insides of that VSO is much more terrifying whoa :( i have a quite cheap violin myself, my teacher found it, but mine is a real decent violin. I feel sorry for ppl tricked to buy vsos :(

  • @Native_love
    @Native_love Před 3 lety +2

    Olaf, if you can make that violin sound that good, you are truly a miracle worker!

  • @davidorellana6278
    @davidorellana6278 Před 4 lety +1

    Two set brought me here but Olaf made me stay , such wonderful work .. brilliant

  • @kodoqbesar4301
    @kodoqbesar4301 Před 4 lety +57

    He should review TwoSet's DIY violin that costs around 69 dollars.

    • @zwz.zdenek
      @zwz.zdenek Před 4 lety +5

      That's 69 LMAO.

    • @justemily6444
      @justemily6444 Před 4 lety +1

      He did and he commented on it XD
      There’s no vid of him reacting to it so qwq

    • @Kimoto504
      @Kimoto504 Před 4 lety +1

      They trashed it.

  • @lyphebliss7278
    @lyphebliss7278 Před 4 lety +8

    Who else yeeted themselves after seeing the word ‘Sacriligious’ on the thumbnail??? XD

  • @RPSchonherr
    @RPSchonherr Před 4 lety +8

    I'm never going to be a violinist. I'm just going to "fiddle" around now and then. The $100 toy is good enough.

    • @brattingprincess
      @brattingprincess Před 4 lety +2

      Renting is cheaper and you can get a MUCH better instrument.

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr Před 4 lety +1

      @@brattingprincess That is probably the best idea. I know a lot of students in middle school and high school rent instruments for marching band. I hadn't thought that they rented violins too.

    • @brattingprincess
      @brattingprincess Před 4 lety

      Robert Schuster Yeah we all rent until we get to be full size. Even as a big kid I grew into full size at age 12. There also may be an availability issue because maybe there aren't any rental shops in the area.

    • @eldricgrubbidge6465
      @eldricgrubbidge6465 Před 3 lety +1

      Honestly, something like this can potentially be fine to play with, just not as nice sounding as the real deal.
      BUT
      1) Usually the set-up is just as terrible as the materials. The pegs stick. The bridge is badly cut. The nut is all weird. So it's nearly impossible to tune the thing. It's uncomfortable and difficult to play. Basically hellish for a begginer.
      2) sorting out these set-up issues is actually quite expensive. So you saved money buying a cheap violin and then you have to spend loads of money polishing a turd.
      3) if you spend your money the other way round - 500 for the fiddle, 100 for the set-up, and Not 100 for the fiddle 500 fixing it's issues - you'll probably have something decent. I'm not saying it'll be amazing, but it will be miles and miles ahead of a plywood one.

  • @tybriggs9880
    @tybriggs9880 Před 4 lety +3

    Tree's from the mini ice age made it into great violins

  • @QoraxAudio
    @QoraxAudio Před 4 lety +2

    10:30 When a violin maker uses a chisel to split wood 😂
    Looks like you're preparing it for your furnace 😜

  • @oystersnag
    @oystersnag Před 4 lety +8

    Thank you Olaf. This is extremely educational. I would love to see you do some work on a cello sometime too.

  • @SculptyWorks
    @SculptyWorks Před 4 lety +9

    Olaf is so very brave to open up a violin on camera! That's kind of a luthier's dark, secret process, not meant for the public eye, because of how violent and scary it looks! And the noises it makes, it can make violinists faint! 😉 👍

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Před 4 lety +8

      It has made violinists faint...
      Especially when they see their $100,000+ violin being opened.
      But no, I never open clients instruments in front of them.

  • @milanvarghese
    @milanvarghese Před 4 lety +170

    I was literally shocked to see that this violin was made of plywood. These violins should not exist.

    • @NatJediMASTER
      @NatJediMASTER Před 4 lety +5

      You’d be surprised how many really cheap instruments are like this. It breaks my heart a little every time I see one.

    • @milanvarghese
      @milanvarghese Před 4 lety +16

      @@NatJediMASTER I know mine is a cheap violin right now. Playing on it is sometimes frustrating because the tone on it is not pure. I am really dreaming of buying a good violin in the future to play with. Maybe after I get a job, I am still studying. Sadly, Most violins available in shops in Inda are cheap bad quality mass-produced violins. But I have recently got connected with an experienced Luther in another city and another person who imports authentic old violins from Europain countries.

    • @Ragnar8504
      @Ragnar8504 Před 4 lety +8

      Being a guitar player experienced with the cheapest guitars I'm not surprised at all! Most really cheap guitars are at least partly plywood and have been for at least 50 years. I recently rescued a horribly beaten guitar from 1973 and the back is plywood. The top is solid spruce though and I'd consider it playable. The question is always what you want from an instrument. Guitars are frequently played outside in less-than-ideal conditions (e.g. at a bonfire) and there's no way I'd want to play an expensive classical guitar in that situation! Few people care about nuances of sound in that context either! Obviously playing concerts is something completely different and you want a good instrument for that.
      Violins are probably not played under adverse conditions that often so I can see why you'd expect any violin to be better than a cheap guitar but I can still easily see why a cheap one is made from plywood.

    • @kimseniorb
      @kimseniorb Před 4 lety +7

      They should exist, they are a perfect tool for learning and quite useful in my home studio actually. I prefer them to the old soviet ones that I can find here

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr Před 4 lety +8

      Not exactly plywood. They laminate thin sheets into a press to get the same shape every time hundreds of times a day. A luthier/violin maker will take several days to weeks to make 1 violin that only rich people can afford. These are geared to people who aren't rich so little Timmy can join the school orchestra. If Timmy likes it then Tim buys his own $1000 violin to take to Julliard, after training with a master Mr. Timothy can try for the Symphony Orchestra and get that $10000 violin. If he's good enough to get 2nd chair he'll upgrade to the $500000 one and if he makes first chair he can consider that rare Strad.

  • @toddgreenwood9631
    @toddgreenwood9631 Před 2 lety +9

    I Must Comment.
    I like your channel and I really like how you dissected this violin and gave a lesson on construction and how the sound transfers et cetera. How ever I feel I must stick up for the hundred dollar violin. Yes given to a beginner musician a cheap violin like this may be frustrating if they are trying to get beautiful tone. However one can still play Edelweiss on a cheap fiddle like this right out of the box and an accomplished player can make it sound quite sweet and quaint albeit with a very small and thin tone. While on the other hand some players can't make anything sound good.
    I loved my hundred dollar violin (although the year was 1976 and it was a 50 dollar violin. ) I was a young (15yo) guitar player in the city to by yet another guitar and started to talk violins with one of the luthiers at a store. I got to see the range of prices from 800 dollars to 10 thousand and was completely intrigued. Having saved more money on my guitar purchase than I had anticipated I had fifty dollars left and the dude said how, he wouldn't recommend it, but they did have something that they referred to as a "Chinese Special". We went in the back back room which was behind the back room and they had about 50 of these units, in cases that came with a bow and a block of very hard rosin and all of these fiddle stunk if mothballs. Of course one of them went home with me and my new guitar.
    While I loved this instrument not everyone else did. I was awful at playing it but I was so amazed at how I could squack out a tune on this violin shaped thing. Later I used the dimensions to hog the wood off some fire wood in our farm shop and ruffed together a solid body instrument with guitar strings on it. Again, while under appreciated by others I was able to get a tune.
    As the years went by this humble little instrument morphed into different representations of musicality as it bore the brunt of home made pickups, holes for volume pots switches and batteries placed in it and all the while fellow band mates making jokes about it ... but we still played OBS nightly at our gigs and it always packed the dance floor.
    So I understand you discouraging people in the purchase of a 100 dollar violin but I would like to not discourage anyone still considering laying down a hundred bucks on one of these violin shaped instruments. Consider ... in this purchase you get, a cheap fiddle, a chunk of rosin BOW and a CASE ... for the price of a steak and red wine for two. For someone who wants to experiment with sound and perhaps perform destructive modifications to the instrument as I had done I would much rather they did it on a factory built plywood unit rather than even a cheap 500 dollar instrument build by a craftsman.
    (Oh! and the bow, o course can be used on everything from electric guitars to wine glasses. And the case can be used to care for a barn find fiddle should the former be discarded, just wrap it in a tea towel)
    You won't be earning a lot of points at a fiddle recital with these hundred dollar units. But throw a mute on it and it is adequate practice equipment. It can be frustrating to play if your used to a better instrument but it can really make you work harder to bow correctly. The only thing worse than these cheap fiddles is having no fiddle at all. Know which end of the horse you are looking at and keep expectations in perspective. Anyway, who owns only one fiddle.

  • @Capt.SeaShanty
    @Capt.SeaShanty Před 4 lety +3

    I love how quickly this man can tune a violin

  • @jasonwang7028
    @jasonwang7028 Před 4 lety +33

    Please do an episode with the God Pillar XD

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Před 4 lety +11

      I'm in two minds about it... it's a really dodgy website

    • @Adam_Wilde
      @Adam_Wilde Před 4 lety +3

      @@AskOlaftheViolinmaker Safer to make your own god pillar. Can't be too difficult 😄

    • @rossthefiddler5890
      @rossthefiddler5890 Před 4 lety

      I converted a viola to the sound post through the belly to the bridge & it made it into a 'deep boomy' viola. That was different. Some have advocated it for small instruments used as a viola to at least get it sounding something like a viola, but it does require careful maintenance of the bridge, unlike many that let their bridge continue to bend towards the fingerboard. The soundpost is connected to the bridge foot by pinning with a toothpick. :)

    • @pheart2381
      @pheart2381 Před 4 lety

      @@rossthefiddler5890 I tried down octave strings on my violin and took them off after two days. The effect was horrible and it took 6 months for my violin to settle back down again.

  • @ikbintom
    @ikbintom Před 4 lety +4

    I'm surprised how relatively alright it sounds, knowing that it's made of plywood

  • @holton345
    @holton345 Před 4 lety +9

    Craftsmanship-real, genuine love and skill being poured into something-is dying across the globe. Few people give a damn about the person who makes the item, so today few makers seem to give a damn in return. For the customer, the price has become the main concern, so in response (and in order to stay financially afloat) the craftsman has been replaced by workers and bosses, for whom price is the main concern.
    You do some nice work, sir. Keep it up, keep those standards high, and keep the videos coming. Thanks!

    • @graceliu2549
      @graceliu2549 Před 4 lety +1

      OMG. This comment! So much. We need more craftspeople who take pride in what they do. And we need consumers who understand that real craftsmanship is worth the extra price. The reason cheap goods are made is because there are people willing to pay for it.

  • @ellisc.foleyjr9778
    @ellisc.foleyjr9778 Před rokem

    Wow! Wow, Wow!! I'm just an avid viewer, no musical violin training , (old drummer from the 60's and even then limited) but I do dabble in wood weekend hacker. but love it. I'm too old to get serous but can at least think serious. that's why I love watching you Olaf. and many other videos per Luthiers etc. Yet even my untrained eye saw a huge!!! difference in the workmanship alone between that older violin and the VSO. Now I can really see why you call them VSO's that's all they virtually are just shapes of the instrument. plywood!!! I can't believe that but I saw it with my own eyes. thank you so much for taking the time to open that beast! and showing us views for sure what you 'be been telling us all along. Great video enjoyed it immensely Thankd for sharing. ECF

  • @nickpag3502
    @nickpag3502 Před 4 lety +1

    Love Olaf's Groot shirt. lol

  • @thatcellistfromfinland4402

    So interesting to see these comparisons of the cheap vs. the expensive! It may be a lot cheaper in the long run to make your own string instrument under tutelage. When I started to play cello my father actually started to build a full sized one for me once a week in a group that builds violins as a hobby. Meanwhile I borrowed an instrument from my music school. Took eight years because it was his first one (he was a doctor so nothing to do with woodwork 😄) Super interesting to follow the process also the cost of the parts spread through the years. My cello was finished for Christmas 2008 and I have been playing it since. In the last stages of becoming a cello teacher and still playing it, I haven't found anything to complain about it. Ofcourse now the cello is priceless for me and sometimes I have to take it to a reputable luthier to keep taking care of it properly which costs money of course. Thanks for the video Olaf!

  • @hrobert745
    @hrobert745 Před 4 lety +4

    I bought an $89 fiddle from Amazon, but I was very pleased because I was comparing to homemade cigar box type fiddles. I liked it so much I got another so I can have two different tunings eventually, for instance dead man’s tuning, DDAD for certain tunes like Bonaparte’s Retreat. By the way, do you know the difference between a fiddle and a violin? You can’t spill beer on a violin. 😹

  • @danayang7712
    @danayang7712 Před 4 lety +5

    Youre sooo inspiring! Im almost thinking about being a violinmaker myself, just from watching your videos. They're so fascinating and exciting!
    Thank you! 👏👏

  • @sobrikey
    @sobrikey Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks dear Olaf , very informative and helpfull

  • @fusion-music
    @fusion-music Před 9 měsíci +1

    The scoop that you mentioned at 7.30 is there not just for beauty or to show off the skill of the luthier. It allows the top to be fee to resonate. All these small things add up to a better instrument. I'm enjoying your videos even though I don't play violin.

  • @JasonBhoy7
    @JasonBhoy7 Před 4 lety +9

    My first ever guitar was a Westfield acoustic made of plywood that cost £60. I still have it and use it 20 years later and you'd struggle to guess it was made of plywood. I have even used it in recordings instead of some of my top end guitars including my beloved Taylor. For £60 it was worth every penny. It can take a beating as well. I learned how to play, how to set up and how to fix guitars from it.

    • @set3777
      @set3777 Před 11 měsíci

      I bought a very cheap plywood accoustic (about $50) guitar too, even though I used to have expensive guitars before. I just needed to replace the bridge with one made of bone, buy better quality strings and with some filing and tuning make it sound OK.
      Violin maker must be so theatened by CHEAP mass produced violins to even tell ridiculous lies about them and just call them VSOs?

    • @costascostas1760
      @costascostas1760 Před 11 měsíci

      To be fair that's like a £120 guitar nowadays. Still very cheap!

    • @set3777
      @set3777 Před 11 měsíci

      @@costascostas1760 Is that a £120 GSO (guitar shaped object)? Since $100 item was just called a VSO (violin shaped object)?
      I remember the days when threatened Pipe Organ Makers tried to deny Lauren Hammond the right to call his USD2000 electric product an "ORGAN". Anyway, sales of Hammond OSO (organ sounding objects) were 1,000 times more than those expansive organs.

    • @costascostas1760
      @costascostas1760 Před 11 měsíci

      @@set3777 nah, guitarists are simple people. We have bad, good, and great guitars. But we get away with it a bit maybe because we can okay many strings together so a really bad sound could be masked a bit by the resonance of many strings. Not sure. F9rbsure I don't think the sound difference between price groups is so pronounced as in violins.

    • @paulmcg8237
      @paulmcg8237 Před 11 měsíci

      Totally agree, these instruments have their place.@@set3777

  • @pandoraefretum
    @pandoraefretum Před 3 lety +1

    I love this... well done for being entertaining at the same time.... you have the right balance... I'm a fan !!

  • @nikitafang231
    @nikitafang231 Před 3 lety

    Olaf's voice is so calming.
    Even he's scarry look is super cute.

  • @glenntozser817
    @glenntozser817 Před 4 lety

    Bro ... FASCINATING!!
    Thank you!

  • @tookitogo
    @tookitogo Před 4 lety +1

    The rigidity of plywood is precisely why (thick) plywood is used for making good loudspeaker enclosures, where you want to prevent flex, not allow it.

  • @Helveteshit
    @Helveteshit Před 4 lety +4

    @Olaf, Wouldn't plywood be possible for a Violin if you speak about the flexibility? Because if you make the plywood yourself, you can use different types of wood to obtain the qualities of Spruce but the potential vibrational quality of another wood. Since you can mix different type of grains to obtain a different sound quality. And unlike normal wood that you need to carve out. With the plywood, as you make it from scratch. You can potentially shape it according a baseplate from the beginning. Providing that nice base plate that you just need to carve the holes.
    I am hardly a violinist but I am just theorizing. Since plywood does have that advantage. Because like you said, pine's growth during the summer is more flexible while the darker grains are harder. So if you mix dense, light and tropical layers of wood. You should be able to experiment forth a different sound quality that solid wood cannot provide. Of course, that sound might not be ideal, but it is interesting thought to me.

  • @boeriksson9116
    @boeriksson9116 Před 11 měsíci

    Loved the "shallow and Trumpety" :-D

  • @lesley-annmathews7971
    @lesley-annmathews7971 Před 4 měsíci

    I have been waiting for this answer... cant wait to see this video thanks!!

  • @Angela-ov7sz
    @Angela-ov7sz Před 4 lety +2

    i---
    my heart was actually beating real fast when you showed on your old violin top plate that violin isnt supposed to be that rigid-
    i was genuinely scared 😂
    .
    but thank you, Olaf, for your content!
    i love it so much 🤍

  • @erniemiller1953
    @erniemiller1953 Před 4 lety +1

    Your explanations are helping when I design my violin. Thank you.

  • @dad458
    @dad458 Před 4 lety

    So entertaining. I love Olaf.

  • @leonardobarraloroz911

    Thanks for the video!!!!

  • @bohuslavpavlyshynets
    @bohuslavpavlyshynets Před 4 lety +6

    This is critic masterclass review for makers of VSOs

  • @trumpetplayer6397
    @trumpetplayer6397 Před 2 lety +1

    Yeah, this is interesting Olaf!
    The one I have now is made by Ernst Heinrich Roth in 2018
    My first violin was a $100 Chinese job. Case, bow, rosin, and agony all complete in one package.
    Failed and didn't achieve anything on that thing.😄
    Now I can play an open string, and it sounds right, and anything else will sound beautiful if played with the right technique.

  • @becomingsports189
    @becomingsports189 Před 4 lety +4

    I love this channel.

  • @GioGuitarGuy
    @GioGuitarGuy Před 3 lety +1

    Olaf thank you for your videos.. I’m a guitar luthier and I’ve been looking for multiple different thinks to apply to my making and fixing. How inspiring to see the violin side of things!

  • @fireballxl-5748
    @fireballxl-5748 Před 11 měsíci

    I know nothing about violins except both my daughters play and the one is an orchestra director at a public school. Thank you for this video that explained to me a little of why violins are so expensive. I watched you repair another fella's violin (a 2 part video) and learned so much. I have a greater appreciation for your expertise...and thank you again.

  • @sonomabob
    @sonomabob Před 9 měsíci +1

    Geez the fact that it played at all for $100 retail is not bad

  • @daviddazer2425
    @daviddazer2425 Před rokem

    I don't play violin or any instrument or repair them, but I find this channel fascinating. Sadly, the $100 violin still sounded good to me. LOL

  • @Joe_for_real
    @Joe_for_real Před 2 lety +1

    I hail from Alaska and have always heard that our Sitka spruce were widely used in the manufacture of instruments. It's so interesting to hear why that might be.

  • @mmartin7483
    @mmartin7483 Před 3 lety

    If I had my life over I would become a Master Luthier and also a Master of the Instrument. Violins are the Nightingales of all musical instuments.
    Thank you so much for ALL your Videos. I have just discovered your Channel and Love It.

  • @gregsanford3848
    @gregsanford3848 Před 2 lety

    Sir Olaf,the passion, very inspiring, sounds like my $200 violin I'm learning on

  • @alfiebroom
    @alfiebroom Před 4 lety

    Awesome!

  • @robinj.9329
    @robinj.9329 Před 3 měsíci

    I'm not a musician. BUT...... I've always "Wished" I were a musician. As a child I tried to get my parents to let me take lessons, but NO! The were simply not interested in having me "Practice" several hours a day and they felt the "Sound" would drive them CRAZY.
    As an adult I've tried to learn Keyboard. And I thought I had a "nature sense of rhythm" for music. But, even my Wife didn't want to hear me practice!!!
    So now, at age 70, I heard someone who is truly a "Master" with their chosen Instrument and I'm both envious and impressed!
    I've looked at violins 🎻 to purchase. And prices are all over the place! From a few hundred to many thousands of dollars! Maybe, one day I'll splurge! Just to have a fine Instrument on hand. And when a real, genuine Master visits my home, I can ask them to "Please, try my own."
    We shall see.......

  • @besthobbit
    @besthobbit Před 11 měsíci +1

    Watching your vids always makes me want to get a new cello. I only started playing 8 months ago though, so I'm trying to put up with the $800 student one I've got for now. If only I was better at saving money 😅

  • @felipeescobar4305
    @felipeescobar4305 Před 4 lety

    I found you channel some days ago, and I am really impressed of how much effort you put to your videos, and how funny they are. Keep it up :)

  • @ILOVEJOJOVEVO
    @ILOVEJOJOVEVO Před 4 lety

    always amazed by your videos, keep it up

  • @scotisland
    @scotisland Před 3 lety

    Fascinating.

  • @sadhbhdelahunt
    @sadhbhdelahunt Před 4 lety

    Excellent information.

  • @blanKoffee
    @blanKoffee Před rokem

    INteRsTiNg! Thanks for the informative content

  • @ljooni
    @ljooni Před 4 měsíci

    I was someone who grew up poor and obsessed with violins, but even as a small, tiny child I knew the value of money so I knew violin and lessons was not an option... So I'm 40 now and I thought what the hell, I can afford the cheapest violin, the 100 dollar one so let's go :D
    So that is what I got. And I struggled to make it even make a sound but your videos helped a lot, especially on setting up the bridge. It sounds awful, I sound awful haha. But with this I can at least see if my lifelong want translates to commitment.
    And if it does, THEN I will try to gather the funds to buy a thousand dollar violin. But in the mean time I really do appreciate knowing what exactly makes mine what it is.

  • @davidtolley5435
    @davidtolley5435 Před 3 lety

    Thanks, you are real good.

  • @herrickelias6742
    @herrickelias6742 Před 4 lety +1

    wow that cheap violin sounds grumpy like before the first cafe of the morning !

  • @poitevienphilip
    @poitevienphilip Před 3 lety

    thanks great video

  • @suepritchard9287
    @suepritchard9287 Před 3 lety

    Jeez Olaf! Thought you were going to take your hand off along with top of the vso!!!!!!!!!! Love the channel ✌️✌️✌️😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @katewebber1131
    @katewebber1131 Před 4 měsíci

    Wow knife and violin should not be near each other. 😊😊😊. You make it all so easy.

  • @cellmeso
    @cellmeso Před 4 lety

    Wow thanks for this amazing video so interesting!

  • @AmandaViolinGirl
    @AmandaViolinGirl Před 4 lety

    You are fired! Love it.

  • @edwincorrales4756
    @edwincorrales4756 Před 10 měsíci

    Wow, Tank you for you video

  • @_koza
    @_koza Před 4 lety +16

    I've always wondered how to become a luthier. Its something Im extremely interested in but dont know how or where to start.

    • @60000L
      @60000L Před 4 lety +4

      I'd assume you'd have to be able to play pretty well to be able to discern precise tuning. After that you'd probably have to get an apprenticeship in Violin-Making from a Luthier (More than likely from Europe) that's willing to teach you!

    • @noranekokimono4301
      @noranekokimono4301 Před 4 lety +9

      Depending where you are from: there are luthier schools where you can study. There are also some luthiers who take in students but at least in germany those students have to go to the german luthier school in Mittenwald for 3 months at a time to pass theoretical classes. If you are serious about becoming a luthier, google luthier schools in your country and maybe ask you own luthier where they studied.
      P.S.: you don´t have to play "well", at least for Mittenwald. There you have to play on a level fitting the years of music lessons you had. You need to have played a string instrument for at least 2 years, so if you have just played for 2 years, you don´t have to play a Mozart concerto or anything like that.
      If you want to know more, feel free to ask. I almost started luthier school as I was waiting for a medschool university place but got accepted into university right before the lutheir school entrance exams. I also am building my own violin in vacation courses with a luthier. I don´t know everything but I can tell you at least a little bit and give some tips.

    • @SculptyWorks
      @SculptyWorks Před 4 lety +6

      You don't have to play well to be a luthier, but it does help to have a good ear, and problem-solving skills, and be good with your hands, and some basic musical understanding.
      How to get into it depends a lot on where you are in the world, but the easiest (and cheapest) way would be through a job at a stringed instruments shop that has a proper luthier on-site and that does repairs, and if the luthier is willing to teach you (ie. an apprenticeship). I've know people who started simply cleaning up the dust and dirt from rental instruments and from there learned how to do proper repairs.

  • @mike94560
    @mike94560 Před 4 lety +4

    Have you tried one of those 3D printed violins? That should be hilarious.

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr Před 4 lety

      Those are really horrible. I watch a video of someone making and playing one. cringe

  • @ronaldmoretto4844
    @ronaldmoretto4844 Před 7 měsíci

    Olaf, I’ve worked in China for many years in string instruments factories including violins, my job was mainly line production consulting and QC. I knew it was plywood at the moment the video started, I can tell you all about these cheap violins, there’s also lots of interesting info about how it’s is made, which is totally different than handcrafted real violins.

  • @janawagner9446
    @janawagner9446 Před 3 lety

    When I realized what you meant when saying VSO I spilled my coffee over my keyboard laughing:-)
    That fits so perfect to this... thing :-)

  • @sorrenblitz805
    @sorrenblitz805 Před 3 lety

    Watching these as a guitarist: "I don't know why I'm here but I'm happy that I showed up."

    • @psalm3496
      @psalm3496 Před 3 lety

      Jesus loves you. God sent him on the cross to die for YOU so you can be freed from sin and spend all eternity in heaven. He’s coming soon!