Acoustic Guitar Woods! Rosewood, why? Hickory, why not?

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Ever make an acoustic guitar of Ash, Hickory, Cherry? A monologue discussion of advocating the use of north American hardwoods in acoustic guitars.

Пікірлер: 275

  • @ronaldkirby9299
    @ronaldkirby92998 ай бұрын

    Agreed ive been woodworking since I was 8 yrs old. 40 yrs later ive made just about everything out of wood. About 6 yrs ago I got idea to make guitar out of walnut and cherry. I was told it can't be done. Thank you for this video challenge accepted.

  • @johncalkin7423
    @johncalkin742320 күн бұрын

    I began building with birch because it was the cheapest hardwood at the local lumberyard. I remain fond of birch, but I moved up to cherry as my chops developed, then walnut. I wrote an article recommending cherry in American Lutherie magazine in 1991. By the time lumber is rendered into instrument wood we can judge whether or not it will be stable enough for guitars, regardless of grain flow. I love the exotics too, but it is way more fun to track down and build from N. American varieties. As you say, it’s strange that they are just now being recognized as wonderful instrument woods. Tradition and closed minds are powerful forces among musicians and luthiers alike. Thank you for your videos. I always enjoy them.

  • @robertduvall7392
    @robertduvall7392 Жыл бұрын

    I'm 65, a lifelong tinkerer and wood worker, and played guitar as a hobby since age 10. My first guitar had a neck that was way too thick, so I carved it. I never looked back. I eventually went into engineering because that is all I could seem to do. I was thinking I would tool up, buy woods, and help local kids get a good electric guitar and do it hands-on, so I began to pursue that. Well, I destroyed my back during that endeavor, and it never happened. Now I have all of these woods, and the hardness and density are what I based my choices on. Yes, they are equatorial woods - something I didn't think about at the time. Many of the boards could easily be used for acoustic guitars and I have a bandsaw with ten-inch capacity. I just finished building a real woodshop which is something I have never had. So now I am trying to get a few in before I kick the bucket. Watching your presentation, I get exactly where you are coming from. If it has the right specific gravity and hardness relativity, what difference does it make where it came from? And yes, the US has plenty of forests to selectively harvest. Being from the West coast, the woods that fall into that category are less available, but even some of the West coast varieties would probably work. I agree that this concept that it has to be this or that exotic wood and as you say the practices absolutely should be part of the decision, and it is good to see this thought-out approach finally coming into the fore. Controversy or not, having controversy over taking advantage of others and in the process destroying the lungs of the earth is silly. It is killing the future for what - A nice-looking guitar body? Okie dokie, that's just fantastic. I'll say it whereas you didn't - think hard about the impact of your personal choices - it did not just magically appear into a music store - a lot happened before it got there. Some of it was good, and some of it really bad.

  • @NickleJ

    @NickleJ

    8 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed reading your comment and agree with your assessment. I fear our society has gone down a really bananas path with regard to what we prioritize. And you didn't say it, but I will, this has happened at the hand of capitalist consumerism and the perverse notion that value can be expressed in USD.

  • @MrBullethead63
    @MrBullethead638 ай бұрын

    I agree 100%! I built a quarter sawn red oak Martin style Dreadnaught for a friend, and was amazed at how good it sounded! It is really beautiful, too!

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    8 ай бұрын

    Sometime in the 90's, Martin built three Dreadnoughts in Walnut, Cherry and Red Oak. They were not well received at all,I think because they didn't look "Martinique" and it's too bad because all of those guitar were every bit as good as any other Dreadnought they built. I don't have to guess. I KNOW your Red Oak guitar is excellent and I admire your willingness to divert from the Mahogany mentality.

  • @robertlong7665
    @robertlong76657 ай бұрын

    Fascinating. I built 4 dreadnoughts out of walnut in 1976. Sounded great then. I saw two of them a few years ago and they aged beautifully. Making a birdseye classical right now. Glad to see I'm not the only nativist out there!

  • @naturalsurvival1536
    @naturalsurvival1536 Жыл бұрын

    Another American hardwood of interest is Osage Orange. It is a very good tonewood, getting close to some of the rosewoods in sound, hardness, and density. I was just wondering about hickory and I think I will give it a try on one of my next builds coming up!

  • @rudybaker8641

    @rudybaker8641

    5 ай бұрын

    Same family but a bit less numericaly is mulberry and even pecan

  • @willymccoy3427

    @willymccoy3427

    4 ай бұрын

    I've been using Osage Orange for fretboards, nuts and bridges.

  • @johnpeters211

    @johnpeters211

    Ай бұрын

    I was going to mention Osage Orange separately but will tag on to your comment. It is much harder than Hickory at 2,620 J hardness and .76 specific gravity. Pretty inexpensive as well. I have some planning to make bridges and fretboards with it.

  • @hackerguitar
    @hackerguitar Жыл бұрын

    Osage orange is a viable candidate - it bends well and has numbers in the range of the rosewoods. Acacia melanoxylon (Black acacia), which is a close relative of koa, also bends well and is often available in sizes that work for instrument making. Black acacia also makes good fingerboards, holding frets surprisingly well.

  • @marianhood1025
    @marianhood1025 Жыл бұрын

    I live in Western Canada and I'm studying lutherie. My chosen instrument is the ukulele and my latest build was of what we call Manitoba maple, I believe it's also called box elder. The reds in it are spectacular and, although it needed quite a bit of stabilization, I'm very pleased with how it sounds. I've purchased some roasted maple that I plan to try using for fret boards and bridges. By all means, let's explore the possibilities of the native North American woods.

  • @abydosianchulac2

    @abydosianchulac2

    Жыл бұрын

    How did you finish the BE to keep the flame from fading over time?

  • @marianhood1025

    @marianhood1025

    Жыл бұрын

    @@abydosianchulac2I used Stew Mac's wipe on poly. The uke is about a year and a half old, not sure how it will age.

  • @DiegoDee
    @DiegoDeeАй бұрын

    On the one hand, I like the aesthetics of tropical woods, on the other hand, we in Europe and you in the USA have wonderful wood right on our doorstep. Look at what wonderful wood maple produces, or plum. You have a great wood in the US that you didn't mention: Osage Orange. I discovered this by chance a few years ago, immediately fell in love with it and was shocked that it was often only used in the oven and so I saved me some sets. Here in Germany there has been an effort for a long time to build instruments with local wood. I have the impression that acceptance is very slow and that a change in thinking has begun, but such "eco" guitars still have an image problem. Australians, on the other hand, are pretty radically focused on sustainable and local wood.

  • @sidweazel2883
    @sidweazel2883 Жыл бұрын

    Really interesting and thought provoking, thank you for making this video

  • @calinguga
    @calinguga8 ай бұрын

    10:30 "you can tap all the fingerboards you want, as far as i'm concerned they don't mean anything to the sound of the guitar" thanks so much for saying this, it's refreshing to hear sense in this field of work.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    8 ай бұрын

    It is fascinating that you can drop a piece of wood so that the end grain hits a concrete floor, and it will deliver a musical tone for a split second, regardless of size. Interesting phenomenon, but I think the "cork sniffers" carry this stuff way too far way too often, fingerboard tapping being a prime example.

  • @jimwoodward6524
    @jimwoodward6524 Жыл бұрын

    Great presentation, I totally agree with you.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm very glad that you enjoyed the video. Thanks for watching.

  • @runarsigurdsson1517
    @runarsigurdsson1517 Жыл бұрын

    I like this video. I live in Iceland, and it is challenging to get wood here. I use what I can get, and I have used oak and beech, which sound great.

  • @suzukiyesteryear

    @suzukiyesteryear

    Жыл бұрын

    Greetings from Idaho, USA! While I'm certain Iceland gets more than its fair share of snow, freezing rain, blizzards and plain old rainy days; do you find all that moisture makes for difficult drying and general fabrication, as well as simple storage of acoustic instruments?

  • @chasmenear7130
    @chasmenear71308 ай бұрын

    As a luthier (restoration), and player I completely agree with what you are pitching here. I especially like the idea of oak as a tone wood. Glitches if any occur (or seem to occur) from two things. One is how the wood is cured/dried, the other being that some of the wood described is rather hard on cutting tools - primarily because they are less 'oily' than many of the exotic woods. Both factors are easily overcome.

  • @jameseddy5796
    @jameseddy57968 ай бұрын

    I watched this video with great interest. I've been a woodworker most my life, but only recently built my first guitar, a classical. I used black walnut throughout (with spruce top and wenge fingerboard and bridge). I've only used domestic hardwoods in my work for years, so it was a no-brainer to use some of the walnut in my shop (I found a nice piece of quarter sawn in the lumber yard.. I think it is a very handsome guitar and is delightful to play. I see all the mistakes in my first build and don't care. It's for me, and some mistakes will be replaced by others as I make more.. I just recently discovered your channel, and like your approach to craft. It's not too far from mine (though I have a small but substantial CNC in my shop). I look forward to more of your videos.

  • @rakentrail
    @rakentrail Жыл бұрын

    I have a guitar shop in NC. Mostly repair work but I do from time to time get to build. About 20 years ago a friend had two very large cherry trees that had to be removed for an addition on his house. He gave me the trunks. I also acquired a fair amount of Black Walnut and some Red spruce from the mountains. These woods do make great guitars.

  • @Gardavkra
    @Gardavkra Жыл бұрын

    This is an excellent video and I just became a new subscriber. I like the looks of the lighter woods also. There are also great woods from the northwest as well. I agree with your comment about companies harvesting wood for profit.

  • @bradhibbitts6901
    @bradhibbitts6901 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the information

  • @dalgguitars
    @dalgguitars Жыл бұрын

    Good video, good job.

  • @EmbracetheQuestion
    @EmbracetheQuestion Жыл бұрын

    Really enjoyed your approach Kevin!

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome, thank you! I have enjoyed building in local materials for thirty years and have not intention of changing.

  • @shanerohane7494
    @shanerohane7494 Жыл бұрын

    Wow those guitars look great! ❤

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. To date, I have made 145 of them and they are in most states in the union as well as one in Scotland. You can see more guitars and shop pictures at www.ladueguitars.com

  • @NickleJ
    @NickleJ8 ай бұрын

    Excellent video and channel, I love it. Instant sub.

  • @darringodden7225
    @darringodden7225 Жыл бұрын

    I would imagine you could make something beautiful using your knowledge of the material regardless of the species a thoroughly enjoyable video created by a man that truly cares. All the best.

  • @wallygoots
    @wallygoots5 ай бұрын

    Wonderful to hear. I love walnut, maple, locust, even oak. I really want to build with American chestnut and very excited to hear that you have!

  • @donaldrichards8516
    @donaldrichards8516Ай бұрын

    It is good to hear someone else talking about using our on local woods to build great guitars I am getting back into building now instead of just repairs and I am going to build with my local materials I do have other ideas to make them sound really good and I see no reason we can not build great instruments with what we have available and I was really surprised when I saw your video and you made me a lot more secure in my endeavors and I thank you it means more than you could know and to say your guitars are very beautiful and I will be looking forward to more of your videos as they come out

  • @jamesmcgraw724
    @jamesmcgraw724 Жыл бұрын

    Great informative video …. Agree with your comments on the explotation of the world’s forest.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching!

  • @tomallen8527
    @tomallen8527 Жыл бұрын

    I am a new builder. Thank you. This is a great encouragement for me to use local woods for my guitars.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    You're very welcome. Get good luck with your building. Send me some pictures?

  • @Mental_hygenics
    @Mental_hygenics2 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I just flame treated plywood and used stainless steel for my guitar sides. Ive realized tone comes from so many places. Thank you for the information!

  • @ksquine
    @ksquine Жыл бұрын

    A big part of the problem is the market. People tend to get very conservative when buying expensive instruments....It's gotta look like a pre-war Martin or Gibson or that guitar my hero played. Walnut has become much more popular lately and maple has been around for years. Other woods will become popular as people see more guitars out and about.

  • @JDCottonMusic
    @JDCottonMusic8 ай бұрын

    What an inspiring presentation on reducing environmental impacts and encouraging the use of domestic American tonewoods. I’m on board. I actually found this video while searching for guitars made from Hickory species.

  • @yomommaahotoo264
    @yomommaahotoo26413 күн бұрын

    This is a very good tutorial.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    10 күн бұрын

    Thank you. I hope you view and enjoy my other videos.

  • @Selmer1430P
    @Selmer1430P4 ай бұрын

    Using your advice I made my first ever top. A four piece from a cedar fence post, and a cherry fingerboard from a trim scrap. I put it on an old Harmony parlor that I bought at a thrift store for $40 that had a collapsed top. It looks beautiful tho I haven't strung it yet. Just the experience was extremely fun and addicting. Thank you for all your inspirational videos!

  • @GonzGunner
    @GonzGunner Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your insightful video! I like how you pointed out specific gravity of woods that can be used in acoustic guitar construction, and how, as you say, overlap the equatorial woods. My user name here notwithstanding, LOL, what I look for in a good acoustic guitar is not only playability, but good projection and balance of tone from bass to treble. That's why, and I have had players of all kinds and skill levels tell me; "Yeah right, sure" I have always said it's harder to buy an acoustic than an electric. You can do a lot of things with an electric to alter/improve it's tone, but it's limited with an acoustic. It's "this is the tone you get", and that is in no way an insult to you or any other lutihier. You have crafted very beautiful instruments, keep up the great work! 😊😊👍👍

  • @REGLeaf
    @REGLeaf Жыл бұрын

    This video has been very informative & very well done. Certainly reformed my perspective somewhat on guitar building ethics, looks vs sound. I have 3 guitars, one of which is a Guild Classical, nylon strung, & is the 1st guitar I ever purchased 64 years ago in the dry, high desert western state of Utah. Sir, please continue making your very beautiful & heartfelt, videos. Now a loyal fan, Ron (“in Utah”) 😎 🇺🇸

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your comment. I appreciate it. That Guild classical you have is quite rare. They were very nicely made and yours is from the original Hoboken, NJ shop when the founder, Alfred Dronge, was alive and active. NICE!

  • @andrewmundenandcadfellmast4624
    @andrewmundenandcadfellmast4624 Жыл бұрын

    Second comment lol. If you know of Trevor Gore (well known Aussie luthier and author), he made an amazing guitar using so called "rubbish timbers" he recycled from his shed. Its sounds pretty darned good, considering it was made using construction type lumbers. So, tonewood is important to a certain degree, particularly in tops, but for backs and sides, necks and fretboards, the amount they contribute to tone is fairly small, esp for a beginning maker like myself (I dont qualify as a luthier yet😂). Trevor stressed that good basic grain considerations, timber qualities (how easy is it to bend, density etc) and most of all, sound construction techniques, are what contribute most to tone (apart from the soundboard). Its tge last little few percentage points of tone that come from tge best timbers, but most folks cant tell the difference anyway...

  • @deorotonewoodmill
    @deorotonewoodmill Жыл бұрын

    I just wanted to touch base and say hello. 4 years ago I started a milling local tonewoods (I'm in Southern Ontario)- black walnut, american cherry, locust, butternut, etc. to offer rainforest alternates to the luthier community. Thanks for your video!

  • @jtelevenoyd1571
    @jtelevenoyd1571 Жыл бұрын

    I really like your general outlook, and you make beautiful guitars. Subscribed, and I have your website bookmarked too.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome, thank you!

  • @tommytbonescramer3908
    @tommytbonescramer39085 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed this video and learned more about building an acoustic guitar. My first acoustic guitar build is a kit with body and back figured maple, mahogany neck, the rosewood fret board will be a maple, the rosewood saddle is birds eye maple and the head was rosewood laminate is not figured male veneer. I hope my build is half as nice as my imagination see it, I will post it on my web site when I've finished.

  • @EdwardMartinsPhotography
    @EdwardMartinsPhotography3 ай бұрын

    I just bought a solid walnut back and sides/sitka spruce top Taylor AD 12e-sb, and it is really an interesting sounding guitar. It's got the warmth of Koa on the low end with the sparkle of Maple in the treble, and the mid range of Mahogany. It's kinda hard to categorize but it sounds wonderful. Very balanced with a hint of spice. A beautiful grain and color as well.

  • @jorgegauthier7697
    @jorgegauthier7697 Жыл бұрын

    I've come to similar conclusions over the years and have enjoyed using black locust in particular.

  • @KathyAndrew
    @KathyAndrew10 ай бұрын

    Was going to mention using Osage Orange as well, seems it would make a fantastic neck. I have sawn some, and it saws well when green. The stuff is yellow when it is fresh, but turns as dark as walnut after you have finished. Light seems to darken it.

  • @davidboyd1617
    @davidboyd16177 ай бұрын

    Just discovered your channel and I agree wholeheartedly about the need to build as much as feasible with local woods -- it does seem to finally be gaining some ground, but it's taken decades. I remember Ted Davis talking about this some (especially about Osage Orange) back in the 80's in a couple of GAL articles and was lucky enough to visit his shop way back then.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for your comment.To put a finer point on the video, I don't advocate that the industry, especially production shops and manufacturers start using local materials. In fact, I don't care what the "cork sniffers" do and I resent the business models of the manufacturers. What I DO advocate is that luthiers question the conventions of our craft, especially those regarding material use.

  • @richardcooksey1600
    @richardcooksey1600 Жыл бұрын

    If you want to color that light color fret board try rust and vinegar. It reacts with tannin in the wood and darkens it. Some woods will go all the way black. It really brings out the grain.

  • @robertdavis1116

    @robertdavis1116

    Жыл бұрын

    Fume with ammonia

  • @swilliams2229

    @swilliams2229

    Жыл бұрын

    We used to call that stuff "liquid hell" It seemed to fit for some reason.

  • @mooseymoose

    @mooseymoose

    Жыл бұрын

    Also you can soak the surface with strong tea to increase the blackening.

  • @abydosianchulac2

    @abydosianchulac2

    Жыл бұрын

    For a more controlled, repeatable stain you can use ferrous sulphate/"green vitriol" for this effect. It's purchasable for pretty little expense online, and once you find a solution strength you like you can mix it up again and again without the crapshoot of whether you have as many rusty nails of the same level corrosion as last time.

  • @valvenator

    @valvenator

    Жыл бұрын

    Make sure to test on scrap. Some woods will stain unevenly with light and dark blotches.

  • @loubydal7812
    @loubydal7812 Жыл бұрын

    Great video and I agree with you. I would like to bring to attention as a guitar player the tons of wood used for the low end of the guitar manufacturing, import instruments from around $100 to $300, maybe some would consider up to $500, that at the present pace today's remaining forests may go extint in the next few decades. Add to that also the cheap furniture market, another story. My point is to support the most for regional wood species harvested responsibly and we could still make amazing guitars for generations. The sound can be subjective, besides rosewood, mahogany, ebony, and most other tropical woods, a guitar made with different suitable woods and great craftsmanship will sound wonderful too. Thanks.

  • @s_m_north
    @s_m_north Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic video. Your point from 7:30 on. Exactly this. I’ve made a couple of instruments but understand the pragmatism at this point I’m not going to make a fantastic instrument that would warrant this expensive wood. I’ve just finished a British Oak back and sides Baritone Ukulele. All the wood used has been salvaged/recycled. It works. That’s all I expected of it. Building up knowledge and confidence for the next build. Thank you and subscription added.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Good stuff! And I'm glad you liked the video.

  • @charredbirchguy2349
    @charredbirchguy2349 Жыл бұрын

    My last guitar was all common North American woods. The fretboard was hickory from a piece of leftover flooring.

  • @thomasfelty6468
    @thomasfelty64687 ай бұрын

    I build pretty much with Walnut, Cherry, Maple, and White Oak. Lately, I've been using Pacific Madrone for fretboards and bridges. My stash of exotics is pretty much gone and I don't plan on building with anything but domestic woods until I pass. Great Video.Thank you.

  • @tonyt.1596

    @tonyt.1596

    6 ай бұрын

    How stable has the Madrone proven to be? I had heard furniture makers claim the wood is very unstable and will twist and warp as it ages.

  • @robinleebraun7739
    @robinleebraun7739 Жыл бұрын

    I have been using honey locust for fretboards. It is abundant in Wisconsin and has interesting grain. I have access to an urban tree service that sells wood from trees that have to be taken down in the Milwaukee area.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds great! Thank you for your input. I hope other might follow your suggestion.

  • @jeffreyfortney9180
    @jeffreyfortney9180 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for providing an honest evaluation. I buy guitars for ONLY how they sound.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your comment.

  • @ronaldrice4085
    @ronaldrice4085 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks great info. I am retired. wood work guitar player from Michigan live in Thailand planning to build 12 string have one now a Guild 12 guild 6 and a Starfire Guild. going to use what ever I can find here thanks again

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Best of luck! I'm sure your effort will be rewarded with a terrific instrument.

  • @edmiller4149
    @edmiller4149 Жыл бұрын

    Bravo! The exotic stuff is disappearing. We need to appreciate what wood we have here and value it for instruments.

  • @lyndamcardle4123
    @lyndamcardle4123 Жыл бұрын

    I can't argue with your premise ! For me, you can't beat maple for its bright sound and tone. I have guitars and ukuleles of all types but, walnut, cedar and maple make lovely tonal soundboards - never mind back and sides. I also have spruce, mahogany, koa, as well as acacia, bubinga, sapele, rosewood and countless others. I have yet to note any instrument made from cherry, willow and ash but, I'm willing to try !

  • @chammond5274
    @chammond5274 Жыл бұрын

    I would have loved seeing a hickory guitar. Not a luthier but I really like working with hickory. I live in the Ozarks and we have lots of it.

  • @rhino2104
    @rhino2104 Жыл бұрын

    It's funny that you post this video shortly before I bought a large piece of quartersawn, figured pecan (which is a type of hickory) to build guitars with. I've been wanting to use locally sourced woods as much as possible. Much like you, I looked at hardness and specific gravity and compared it to commonly used exotics and found that a lot of native hardwoods are almost identical on paper to the "traditional" exotics.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I would use Pecan in a heartbeat if it was available in my area. I used to work in a furniture store that sold a line of Pecan Bedroom and Dining furniture. Delightful; simply delightful.

  • @gilbertachsen4734
    @gilbertachsen4734 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Kevin, i'm a player and have bought all kinds of used string instruments. You can bet that after watching your informative video that i'll be encouraging any luthier building from indiginous woods.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your positive response, but more importantly, your receptiveness is refreshing and encouraging. It's nice to know that not everyone suffers from "Rosewood Retention".

  • @MrDaveKC
    @MrDaveKC Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. I saw a video from a guitar builder who used Osage Orange for a guitar build. Sounds very interesting to build out of local materials. I'm doing some amateur building and want to soon build my own acoustic, and would love to do more local woods here in the Midwest.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting! Im seeing Osage Orange and hearing of it more and more. I have never used it but would really like to. at the moment, i don't know where to find it. I'll be searching.

  • @MrDaveKC

    @MrDaveKC

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thepragmaticluthier so I'm in western Missouri, and there's a hardwood store that sells it. The big challenge is that it's hard to get big enough chunks for guitars. I saw that Showalter guitars in Virginia uses it, and in fact used American Sycamore as a top. So I can get it here, but I'm not sure how really in guitar sized pieces. I cut down a tree when I bought our current house four years ago. I've cut some of the logs down and I'm making a box body mandolin out of the wood. Hopefully it'll turn out well, and I'm pretty sure the wood is Osage Orange. It's very common along creek beds here.

  • @barkeater9606
    @barkeater9606 Жыл бұрын

    IMO, a tiger striped maple stained like the old Kentucky rifles were, would make a beautiful fretboard. 👍

  • @rustyriley51
    @rustyriley51 Жыл бұрын

    Hedge (Osage Orange, Bois D’Arc). Janka hardness of 2620, SG of .86. Every fence line from dust bowl Kansas and Oklahoma cover in it.

  • @hampshirepiano6383
    @hampshirepiano6383 Жыл бұрын

    You ain't kidding, there is fine wood here in NE only sufficient ageing time is the problem. We have wormy Chestnut and some clear also, it makes very good backs. Nice walnut!

  • @crandallwoodworking2988
    @crandallwoodworking29885 ай бұрын

    Live oak is 2680 hardness. I have a ton of it drying outside my house right now. It should be useable in a couple years. I plan on trying that out. I also have some beautiful bright redish-pink cedar already dried. That'll be my first guitar.

  • @red58impala

    @red58impala

    Ай бұрын

    I was thinking the same thing and wondering if someone else had commented on Southern live oak. Desert Ironwood has an even higher Janka hardness at 3260, but I'm not sure if it would be suitable for anything other than smaller projects.

  • @jesseobrien1237
    @jesseobrien1237 Жыл бұрын

    I agree with your thinking !! I have been collecting for 35 years , I have often wonder why can't other woods be used to build instruments !!

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    If you've been collecting wood for 35 years, it sound like it's time to start building. :)

  • @tomehCanada
    @tomehCanada Жыл бұрын

    I've tried Boucher solid cherry and it was excellent. I've tried and had walnut guitars, all excellent. Maple on Jumbos are a great combo. Thanks for the video. Tom eh

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    6 ай бұрын

    Is that black cherry (prunus sp.) Or what they sometimes call "wild" cherry, some kind of birch (Betula sp) that they use (Boucher)?

  • @tomehCanada

    @tomehCanada

    6 ай бұрын

    @@nicholasgeorge7825 Prunus serotina, Black Cherry. Cheers, Tom eh

  • @barkeater9606
    @barkeater9606 Жыл бұрын

    This is great information. I think that an Adirondack spruce top, black cherry back and sides, and a maple/hickory neck would make a great guitar. Also, all of the wood could come from local lumber. Here in the Adirondack Mountains of Upstate New York, we have all of it. Curly yellow birch is also a beautiful wood.

  • @pmwhitlock

    @pmwhitlock

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm in the Southern Appalachian range but I'm currently building that exact guitar! Curly black cherry, red spruce, and maple neck.

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    Жыл бұрын

    Yellow birch or other hard birch (sweet birch) would make a fine tone wood and might be hard enough for fingerboards too.

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    6 ай бұрын

    Hey you want to barter red spruce for something I might have? Also how do you tell if its red at the lumberyard? Any clues?

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    6 ай бұрын

    Yellow birch is good. Sweet birch also. One of them is really hard. You find it on stupid Americana furniture like Ethan Allen.

  • @donyoung7874
    @donyoung7874 Жыл бұрын

    It would be nice to hear how they sound.

  • @ksgjlg
    @ksgjlg Жыл бұрын

    It always amazed me that the best "tone woods" are only the rarest woods from exotic locations. Lots of great woods here. I personally have an affinity for quarter sawn white oak.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it's a "grass is always greener" situation. I too, admire quartered White Oak. I recently did an acoustic bass that went to Knoxville, TN with White Oak. Very cool look; tasty sound.

  • @nicholasgeorge7825
    @nicholasgeorge7825 Жыл бұрын

    There's some possibly harder alternatives to hickory, and with hickories you really need to watch the species and the growth density. As with all ring porous species, but hickory in particular, hardness will go down with tighter growth rings. There may be exceptions. The temperate zone ebony species, persimmon may have an edge in hardness over the hickories. Osage orange might. Generally black locust will be superior to hickory in stiffness and maybe hardness and wear resistance, but a lot depends on the locale. Gibson used baked maple for a while on Lee Pauls. Torre faction with resin impregnate on may yield good finger boards from temperate zone hardwoods. Walnut might be a good choice for experimenting. I believe old Ovations had walnut fingerboards. See US Forest Service wood data sheets for stiffness, density, hardness and other information on most commercially used wood species.

  • @andrewdarnley4608
    @andrewdarnley4608 Жыл бұрын

    I support your approach 100% on timber choice and worldwide forestry practices. I'm building in Australia and IMHO I have found endemic species that perfectly replace the timbers that have always been considered the *only* species a guitar can be built from.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    That's good to know. i hope you find many, many locally available woods to work with.

  • @octoBadger

    @octoBadger

    8 ай бұрын

    I'm also in Australia, I have some absoutely beautiful red and yellow flamed Mackay cedar - tap tone is very similar other European cedar tops, sounds lovely, looks unreal. Tasmanian Blackwood, Myrtle, flamed Silver Ash for backs and sides. There are loads of good local woods over here IMO. Just have to shop around

  • @michaelparsons5352
    @michaelparsons535225 күн бұрын

    Great video, great topic. As a player, not a builder, I would love to hear some of your guitars. Fo you have any demo videos?

  • @carterruff3657
    @carterruff3657 Жыл бұрын

    I'd love to hear your thoughts and observations on the sound qualities of these woods. (Recognizing, of course that body style, bracing, voicing, and other factors can complicate any broad statements in this area.)

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I like you comment and it is a good and fair question, but I intentionally avoided talking about sound because I thought that I could only do that by comparing these materials to the familiar equatorial species; something I wanted to avoid. I want to encourage viewers to think independently of what is typical and familiar. I may do a short video with sound sample of many of these guitars.

  • @greenie277
    @greenie277 Жыл бұрын

    I built a guitar under your instruction 14 years ago, and I've been wanting to do more woodworking ever since. I recently had to have 4 large white ash trees removed from my property, and sadly didn't have the equipment necessary to mill them. I'm considering remedying that with a bandsaw soon, and hope to start hoarding and drying more native lumber. For now I do have some 4/4 ash slabs and 3-400 bft of reject hardwood pallet blanks (oak, beech, ash, and cherry) stowed in the basement, and I can't wait to start working my way through it. I'll let you know if I ever try my hand at another guitar.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I remember you well. When you get that bandsaw, I hope you'll contact me again. Come visit an old luthier sometime.

  • @greenie277

    @greenie277

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@thepragmaticluthier Hopefully you remember fondly and not because I ruined one of your jigs! I may end up with a Laguna if they go on sale for memorial day, but we'll see. I still need to determine if I can run in 220V or if I'm stuck with 110. I'll let you know if I'm ever able to swing by. I'm 2+ hours away these days.

  • @russparker1647
    @russparker16474 күн бұрын

    The challenge is to get the consumer to buy into the fact that what might appear to them as run of the mill wood as excellent tonewood. I agree with you btw.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Күн бұрын

    That would indeed be a hurtle for manufacturers large or small, but individuals like myself or possibly you, I (we) meet clients one on one and they come looking something that they can't get in a D28.

  • @TonecrafteLuthiery
    @TonecrafteLuthiery13 күн бұрын

    One of the things I find interesting about hickory is how few pores there are in the endgrain, and how small the pores are. If you look up microscope images of hickory you’ll see what I’m talking about. The pores are few and far between compared to basically anything else. I haven’t done any tests or anything but in theory I feel like it would make excellent necks or fretboards.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    7 күн бұрын

    All science and diffuse porosity aside, Hickory makes an excellent back and rim, It will make a terrific neck, albeit heavy. A Hickory fingerboard is a definite if color suits the user. I wish more of it was seen in guitars.

  • @briggshome7012
    @briggshome7012 Жыл бұрын

    If you want the strongest part of the tree, for the hardest woods, get slabs sawn from the BASE of the tree. it must hold the tree up in winds and storms. It receives the greatest stresses throughout the tree's life. The higher you ascend up the tree, the less stress it has endured....and the weaker (respectively) the wood. In wooded areas are usually MANY small private sawmills, and you can work with these folks to get the woods you want. You can dry woods easily in a small shed with a portable heater.

  • @dave160377
    @dave160377 Жыл бұрын

    This video earned my subscription! Osage orange was mentioned earlier, but also fruitwoods are an option worth exploring. Plum and mulberry have a hardness of 1500 and 1680 respectively. Both can have stunning grain and are worth looking into.

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    Жыл бұрын

    That's sounds incorrect for mulberry, at least red. Its not that hard in my experience. For a much harder wood that resembles red mulberry try black locust. Apple can be pretty hard, and dogwood is probably the harder than any of the fruitwoods. Osage orange is an exception but its not really a fruitwood. Unfortunately no North American species can get close to the hardness of some of the tropical species.

  • @abydosianchulac2

    @abydosianchulac2

    Жыл бұрын

    I want to be where you are if you have plum trees large enough for any part of a guitar

  • @golden.lights.twinkle2329

    @golden.lights.twinkle2329

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nicholasgeorge7825 Osage Orange is definitely a fruitwood. Have you seen the fruits that grow on that tree?

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    Жыл бұрын

    @@golden.lights.twinkle2329 Yeah, thanks for that reply. You're right, they're pretty amazing, like lumpy grapefruit, and I think cattle eat them, but humans can't. I don't put it in the fruitwood category, because I think of fruitwoods as rather fine textured without too much pores. You know, like apple and pear. It looks more like black locust, which has similar yellow coloring, though not as yellow, more greenish, but hard, heavy, strong and stiff. Both would make excellent acoustic guitar back and side woods, and I know that they both have been used to good effect. Red mulberry, which has to be technically a fruitwood does look similar, but is much softer. Best of success in your woodworking endeavors.

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    Жыл бұрын

    @@abydosianchulac2 There's an ornamental plum variety that grows to around 2 foot diameter and 60 feet. Latin name is prunus cerasifera "altapupurea," Common name: purple leaf plum. I saw a huge one cut down once, but I haven't seen or handled the wood. I'm sure it's nice.

  • @grmelectric6826
    @grmelectric68268 ай бұрын

    Hey I would love to hear some sound samples of your American hardwood guitars. I’m really interested in the oak. Thanks for all the info!

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    8 ай бұрын

    You will find a video on my channel of just that.

  • @martinlaroche-rx3su
    @martinlaroche-rx3su7 күн бұрын

    this video is just an eye openner to me. I run a small sawmill and do make some quarter sawn boards for woodworking. I also split logs for chairmaking where straight grain is important. After air drying the wood, I might put it in the solar kiln for a while to bring the moisture down that is compatible with my shop. That way I can start using the wood for a project faster. For guitar making, does the wood need extra time to be ready to use or the moisture content is the only criteria of importance? I heard stories about the benefit to air dry tonewood for decades !!?! Thanks for your answer and your time!!!

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    7 күн бұрын

    What any instrument builder is after is stability. Whether it be air drying or kiln drying doesn’t really matter as long as the material is brought to a proper working moisture content, and then carefully acclimated to the environment in which it’s going to be used. As Lumber ages, the various sugars and other substances inside it tend to solidify, and that creates greater stability, but waiting for decades for that to happen is not all that important as long as the material is nicely dry when you begin using it.

  • @HaroldDickert
    @HaroldDickert Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this video. I have also been salvaging local fallen trees (here around the west tip of Lake Ontario), with multiple guitars - both acoustic and electric - made of these woods. You said "Shagbark Hickory is North Americas hardest and heaviest wood", but in fact Osage Orange is significantly harder, heavier, and also much better looking.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I didn't know that. I'm not surprised that It is. My information is borne out of measurements taken on commercially important hardwoods. I've never used osage orange and would like to, but have no idea where to find it .

  • @HaroldDickert

    @HaroldDickert

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thepragmaticluthier I have had conversations with local arborists, asking what they do with the more rare logs. I tell them that I am interested to taking these logs off their hands. One day an arborist showed up with a truck load of Osage Orange. Osage is so hard that it would wear out the wood chippers in short order. This guy was trying to keep his best poker face as he was off loading the Osage on me, while I was also trying to keep my best poker face. After all; An Osage Orange acoustic set here in Southern Ontario will cost about $350 to $450. I've quartered these logs with my chain saw, down to sections I can lift to my band saw, to rip back and side sets, lots fret boards, and even a few electric guitar necks.

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, its hard to get official numbers for Osage orange, and victories vary a lot, but I'm guessing Osage is superior, certainly on average.

  • @stevenwarner4430
    @stevenwarner44305 ай бұрын

    Northern Mexico and southern Texas are filled with Mesquite, I often wonder what a neck, back, sides and fretboard would be capable of made from Mesquite ?

  • @tedrowland7800
    @tedrowland7800 Жыл бұрын

    Okay, I'm going to try saying this from my heart, and be as honest as I can. I have NOT built a guitar yet. I must have tried at least 300 guitars that are commercially built, anywhere from stores in TN, MI FLA, LA, with prices from $500.00 to 7,000.00. I would put aside the looks, and the sweetest sounding to "My Ears", was always some kind of solid Rosewood and Spruce, (or other pines). The Walnut guitars, (that I played), sounded like the notes fell out of the sound holes, instead of having any projection. Koa, (except for a solid Koa electric 12 string that was so heavy it made my shoulder hurt ), I experienced a lack of projection as well.. I was told that the "sound board", (top), was the most important. I tried a solid maple acoustic 12 string, that the entire guitar was maple, and was not satisfied. (Beautiful guitar as far as looks and feel of the neck). It is NOT the look, (although we all love a beautiful guitar), but the sound. I am a medically retired carpenter/cabinetmaker. I am going to try 2 different kit guitars, as I put together more "luthier specific" tools. I should mention that I have lost the right leg below the knee, (NO SYMPATHY), as an explanation, so that some will understand I must build from a wheelchair. I will have to use wood already thickness sawn and sanded. My work will be in my house and I can finish sand and spray lacquer, glue up ect. I love the beautiful guitars you are working on, and maybe someday I can use those woods as well. I now live in MI

  • @ThePopeDr
    @ThePopeDr8 ай бұрын

    Just saw this. Liked at 1:28 subscribed at 2:01

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I'm frequently perceived as radical, dismissive of standard practice or contrary and sometimes it ruffles some feathers. I like that.

  • @maplebones
    @maplebones5 ай бұрын

    I've always been curious about white ash bodies. It's mentioned here and at the Luthier's website, but i've never seen or heard of it being used. It's very close to rock maple in hardness.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    5 ай бұрын

    Iv'e done at least 25 guitars in White Ash. I find it to be a first class material. It bends well, works quite predictably, takes an excellent;ent finish and is stable. It makes a superior neck as well. In general, it can contribute a crispness to tone and and can be quite percussive. You can see a few pictures of White Ash guitars on my website if you care to look. www.ladueguitars.com.

  • @fenderpicker57
    @fenderpicker57 Жыл бұрын

    The Harmony Company in Chicago thought this way. It's my understanding they used mostly solid sycamore and birch to build their guitars back in the 60's. The build quality wasn't the best but at least they used American wood!

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Harmony had a long history that went way back to Lyon & Healy. they were even once owned by Sears & Roebuck. Harmony was, at one time the largest manufacturer of guitars in the country, specializing in low priced instruments. They cared little or not at all about sound. Their goal was to mass produce low price instruments for sale under their own name as well as dozens of others. They manufactured predominantly, in the cheapest, most reliably available materials they could get.

  • @Apillicus
    @Apillicus Жыл бұрын

    I love black locust. If you ever get around to it, mind telling me how you would go about building a guitar with it?

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    It's as simple and direct as building a guitar from any other wood, but it even seems to bend almost with impunity. There are not tricks or impediments. It makes a KILLER guitar.

  • @the_nondrive_side
    @the_nondrive_side Жыл бұрын

    hickory and Oak ebonizes really pretty and dark with light streaks. mahogany is pretty too. cedar makes a great top.

  • @the_nondrive_side

    @the_nondrive_side

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jeffhildreth9244 my Takamine FXC has a Cedar top and Daowood back and sides. It's sold me as a softwood for tops assuming you find a good grain dried and stable as anything.. Spruce isn't exactly different and Sitka is top choice.

  • @the_nondrive_side

    @the_nondrive_side

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jeffhildreth9244 so you haven't had success.. I fail to care. My Takamine from 1993 seems to be holding out just fine...

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm surprised at your statement about Red Cedar (Thuja plicata), especially considering that Ignacio Fleta and many other renowned classical builders did and do use it very successfully. Several American steel string builder, among them James Olsen use it regularly. I doubt that The Ramirez family or any other quality builder would seek out Western Red Cedar purely for economic reasons. Thank you, however, for your comment, especially for describing what you've been doing with guitar wood for fifty years.

  • @paulhendershott667
    @paulhendershott667 Жыл бұрын

    I absolutely love your take on the woods! I was thinking of finding a luthier around the Chicago area, to see they would do a build-assist with me to build a guitar identical in size with the Martin 000-15M I've had for a few years. I with thinking hickory back and sides and Sitka spruce soundboard. I like KOA as well and the birds eye maple too. Never fell in love with the Brazilian Rosewood as most of it seems too dark for my taste. I love Pennsylvania Cherry and an Amish friend built me a blanket chest out of it 33 years ago and it's age beautifully. I don't think I've seen any cherry wood guitars, is that a thing?

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Cherry has been used albeit infrequently. I have seen some Cherry back & rim sets for sale at a couple luthiers' supply companies, but nothing steadily available. Martin was offering a smaller Cherry model, possibly through the custom shop, but I have seen only one in person. I have made at least 25 guitars in Cherry and consider it to be a first class material with respect to sound and sight. You can see pictures at www.ladueguitars.com

  • @pmscalisi

    @pmscalisi

    10 ай бұрын

    @@thepragmaticluthierMartin also offered cherry wood on their SWD Smartwood guitars they built for a few years. The back, sides, and neck were “sustainable” cherry wood.

  • @johnmoyer5515
    @johnmoyer5515 Жыл бұрын

    I have portable sawmill I don't have a kiln but you can find someone that does I have stacks of lumber. I can mill a 30" log but quarter saw need about maybe 16" log heftiest cut is 6" deep

  • @visiblename
    @visiblename5 ай бұрын

    osytra virginiana ironwood (hophornbeam) (native) and lilac( common/naturalized) at least are harder Janka than hickory off the top of my head. However ostrya has a lower modulus of rupture and modulus of elasticity than black locust or shagbark hickory. I think ostrya ironwood would make a bulletproof fretboard at the least. Likely great for everything.

  • @alexmeleshenko4834
    @alexmeleshenko48349 ай бұрын

    Interesting and I agree--for a steel string the options are soo many--but for a classical the marketplace is defined for a rosewood guitar---the tradition goes back Torres ---a classical guitar made out of a alternative wood will be a uphill battle to sell it for a similar price of a comparable rosewood guitar. Also I wish I could have heard some of the guitars in this video.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    9 ай бұрын

    It is true that the (serious) classical guitar community seems to be retentively adhered to the Rosewoods and to a much lesser extent, highly figured Maple. While there may be some slowly evolving acceptance of other materials, it's all okay. While I admire truly fine concert guitars and the skill of those who play them, let the cork sniffers have their way. It's common to equate "new or different" with inferiority.

  • @nicholasgeorge7825

    @nicholasgeorge7825

    6 ай бұрын

    True but Torres used maple , cypress, 4 piece backs, whatever he had, teak even. C F Martin followed the classical guitar tradition, even using Spanish cedar for minor parts or necks sometimes. Martin still does.

  • @johnsee7269
    @johnsee7269 Жыл бұрын

    I believe Antonio made his out of maple and spruce. He made his kinda long and narrow not (exaggerating here...) like the modern, ten feet wide, CF Martin guitars. That guy knew something and did good work. I always liked the idea of walnut and spruce. I think part of the popularity of rosewood is its inherent beauty or intrinsic beauty. My understanding is that Antonio's one remaining, playable guitar is worth about 16 million; obviously attributable to who made it and maybe not whether it sounds as good as a CF Martin...

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Torres made around 155 guitars. I haven't been able to find out how many exist, but I'm sure there are several. I know that the "Romero" family own at least one and i have seen a short video of Richard Brune playing one that he had restored. I believe there are other in some museums around the world.

  • @robertnewell5057
    @robertnewell50578 ай бұрын

    Over here in the UK, some luthiers are trying to uses just UK timbers (most notable Rosie Heydenrich). The big trouble has been tops because spruce and many other softwoods grow to fast here - they are like cardboard! Western Red Cedar is great, but I've also used cedar of Lebanon and larch. For backs and sides we are better off for choice, most notably 3000 year old bog oak (costly, but worth it), sycamore (which you all call maple) and London Plane (which you all call sycamore). This last one is inexpensive, works easily, has a beautiful figure and a tone somewhere between maple and mahogany.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    8 ай бұрын

    I am aware of Rosie Heydenrich and admire her use of materials very much. Here, we do refer to Maple as Maple and London Plane seems to be an alternate name for Sycamore. They both make terrific guitars and I agree with you, that Sycamore works very predictably and in the quartered section, is truly magnificent in appearance. Maple is commonly available here and is an important commercial specie. Sycamore, however does not enjoy nearly the same appeal. Although ubiquitous in the east, it is seldom harvested for lumber.

  • @robertnewell5057

    @robertnewell5057

    8 ай бұрын

    we generally refer to Maple grown in the UK as Sycamore and maple grown in the US as maple. Both acers. London Plane is a a hybrid (Platanus x hispanica); wonderful stuff @@thepragmaticluthier

  • @tessjuel

    @tessjuel

    3 ай бұрын

    @@thepragmaticluthier Sycamore in Europe and sycamore in USA are not the same wood at all, they are not even closely related; in Europe sycamore is simply another name for the common European maple while American sycamores are any of four different plane tree species. European sycamore is the wood used for neck, back and sides of all high quality violin family instruments and I think we can assume that people like Stradivarius, Guarnerius and the Amatis knew a thing or two about which wood to choose.

  • @markpell8979
    @markpell8979 Жыл бұрын

    Wow Kevin, as a woodworker I share your thinking and really enjoyed this episode. Nothing else to add today that would benefit the discussion, except this makes me want to go out to the shop and look through my stash for ideas about something nice to build. Thanks.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it

  • @markpell8979

    @markpell8979

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thepragmaticluthier Update: I found some nice ash, cherry and black walnut out in the storage rack. The walnut has enough quartered vertical grain to get some nice neck sections and a fretboard. I could see a neck with a walnut skunk stripe. Also found an interesting pile of sweetgum I'd totally forgotten. That stuff has beautiful figures in the grain and is harder than Chinese math. Anyway, this has me thinking about a project for Summer. It would be an electric but don't hate me!

  • @sambow4u
    @sambow4u8 ай бұрын

    I Have no Idea where you call Home ! But I do know , I've found a friend ! I've be picking , Playing , Pullin a Bow, Slidin a Dobro , playin Piano , But if it's American and Got strings , I can hold my own ! I'll Play or pick some stringed Instrument for a couple hrs Daily , It's like I almost have to ,,, it's in my Blood ! I Live just east of Asheville N.C. , And your outlook on " Things, Stuff, " is how I grew up ,,, It's always " why can't you , or why would you want to " ! I've been a Carpenter all my Life , There wasn't a choice, if we needed a shed , we built it , a another bedroom , we built it . And mechanically , if it's tore up ,,,find whats broke and fix it ! I'm disabled & retired now and after 9 back surgeries , I think i'm finally as good as it's gonna get ! I've got a implant in my back and wire's running inside my spine , and comes with a remote ! Lol,,, But I build Cabinets and Shelves for people and finally decided, I was gonna build my own acoustic/ Flattop ! But I'm determined , every piece is coming out of the hills of the Appalachian Mountains ! I chosen my back and sides as American Black Walnut ! I've got a Buddy , that deals in Triple A+ lumber , And " We" Are Actually walking his excavator into the woods and digging up Walnut , Maple , Locust, White and Red Oak stumps ! And Harvesting some of the most figured wood youv'e ever seen ! Hemlock and Spruce , That's gonna make Gorgeous tops ! But Finding you on You Tube was a God send for me ! Absolutely Love your channel ! Very sensible , Level headed , problem solver ! TY so much for your Vid !

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    8 ай бұрын

    You're very welcome. I like what you are doing with stumps. I wish I had access to some in my area.

  • @atomdent
    @atomdent Жыл бұрын

    Have you ever considered bois d arc (also known as orange osage) for fingerboard and bridges?It is extremely hard and durable.

  • @mandohat
    @mandohat4 ай бұрын

    Im kinda done trying to build guitars, but thinking about building with North American woods makes me want to try again. I'm so over rosewood and mahogany

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    4 ай бұрын

    Get yourself some nice wood of your choice. It doesn't NEED to be quarter sawn and it WILL be LESS expensive that all that exotic stuff. The lower cost will help reduce the pucker factor because you materials can be easily replaced. Please try it again and enjoy making yourself a terrific guitar:)

  • @mandohat

    @mandohat

    4 ай бұрын

    @@thepragmaticluthier speaking of pragmatic, my first guitar has a neck built from a $6 mahogany board from a home center. I attached it with a stainless steel bolt and a wing nut through the strap button. It's held for 10+ years and never had to tighten it!

  • @ChrisOttoSTL
    @ChrisOttoSTL Жыл бұрын

    I totally agree. I think there are a couple things at play in the desire for "exotic woods'. Manufacturers like to use "premium woods' because they feel they can charge more, and it's an easy way to create the belief that one model if "better' than the other. The one with rosewood back and sides must be "better" than the model with mahogany back and sides, right? At least walnut is becoming more accepted as a quality wood for back and sides. On the consumer side, beyond the fact that most guitar players are very conservative in regards to all aspects of guitar making. 'Martin don't use hickory", they might say. There is also an unfamiliarity with many domestic tone woods. When I had a baritone ukulele made for me, by Bonanza Ukuleles, Big Falls, MN, using a cherry top and walnut back and sides, I was a little nervous about how the cherry would sound, (but I trusted the luthier). It turned out great, with a lovely tone, that has continued to improve over the past few years. I had never played an instrument made from cherry, so it required a but of a leap of faith.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I appreciate your comment about a Cherry top. It has motivated me to build a couple experiments with deciduous tops.

  • @ChrisOttoSTL

    @ChrisOttoSTL

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thepragmaticluthier I hope it goes well.

  • @jemari2
    @jemari2 Жыл бұрын

    Black locust is excellent. However, it is really hard to find in a usable form.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm lucky enough to have a near by mill that saws nothing but.

  • @chrisclarke3670
    @chrisclarke36703 ай бұрын

    How does a guitar with hickory back and sides look and sound? Your piece is very interesting for sure.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    3 ай бұрын

    The tonal effect that a back and rim wood has on a guitar has more to do with density and stiffness than with specie. Hickory is the hardiest, heaviest and strongest commercially used deciduous timber in North America. You can expect it to contribute to a percussive, bright tone. As for aesthetics, lookout some Hickory. I admire it . Others may not.

  • @BenBurgett-dl3yo
    @BenBurgett-dl3yo Жыл бұрын

    Hello Kevin look what came up on my U tube page.Enjoyed the video and subscribed,Keep up the good work I'll be checking in on ya.B

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your comment. Send me a message through my website. I'd like to keep in touch.

  • @andrewmundenandcadfellmast4624
    @andrewmundenandcadfellmast4624 Жыл бұрын

    I like your approach mate 👍🏼. I suspect the only reason the tropical hardwoods are so widely used is because of tradition...The early European makers used those timbers because they were so much better than most of their native timbers, and that tradition has continued...perhaps through ignorance (and I dont mean that in an unkind way) of the reasons the tropical timbers were better than the European timbers. In Australia, we have some of the hardest, strongest and densest timbers in the world, and also some of the most beautiful, but a lot of them are just burnt as firewood... some of our tasmanian timbers have earnt a justifiable place in guitar making, with one or two well known companies using them. However, there are some incredible timbers from the mainland that can be used too. Ive got lots of amazing timbers Ive sourced locally, for not much $$$, which have all the properties you could ever want for guitar backs &sides, necks, bridges and fretboards. The one major thing we are pretty short on, sadly, is soundboard timbers. There are one or two species of indigenous conifers that aren't bad, but nothing approaching the quality of a nice northern hemisphere spruce unfortunately. They can (and have been) used by several local builders, and sound nice, but not outstanding. Our local coniferous trees just dont have the right properties, as most of them grow too fast.

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for you insight on the history and traditions of instrument materials. It's great to know that you are taking advantage of your local timbers. I wish you great success in all of your building endeavors.

  • @andrewmundenandcadfellmast4624

    @andrewmundenandcadfellmast4624

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thepragmaticluthier thanks mate, I'm a late (very!!) starter. Been interested for years and been a hobby woodturner for ages, but really only kicked off making instruments when I retired recently. I have collected a huge stack of auusie timbers over the decades, so have lots to work with. My first build was a classic with all local timbers (under very good tutelage from a local luthier) and has turned out really nicely, and Ive got several other, different instruments, in various stages of completion. I'm really loving it. As my totor said, the bug bites hard lol.

  • @edt.5118
    @edt.51187 ай бұрын

    What are some of the alternative tonewoods for ukulele?

  • @thepragmaticluthier

    @thepragmaticluthier

    7 ай бұрын

    You could use any wood that you care to, provided that it offers the structural integrity and stability required. In short, as long as it's free of knots, cracks and defects and is properly dry.

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