How I Make An Anglo-Saxon Sutton Hoo Style Lyre

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2023
  • After just over a year of making Germanic Lyres I've made a full video of my process.
    The Lyre I make in the video is based on the Sutton Hoo six string Lyre from the ship burial in Suffolk.
    I'm still working on the process, and I'm learning with each instrument, which is great fun.
    The body is Birch and the soundboard and fittings are also Becch.
    I use flurocarbon strings that I get from Michael J King on Etsy under the name "The Lyre Shop", link here:
    www.etsy.com/uk/listing/25281...
    Huge thanks to Aegir Music for making the song in the video, here's his links:
    / aegir_music
    open.spotify.com/album/6Le87p...
    Also a huge thank you to everyone who's helped me with the instruments!
    I won't name people here just in case I forget someone, but you all know who you are!
    This Lyre will be for sale soon once the strings settle, and there'll be a seperate video for that.
    Thanks for watching!
    Miles.

Комментарии • 30

  • @derwishrenegat743
    @derwishrenegat743 7 месяцев назад +2

    I love it when people restore such forgotten antiques and musical instruments. This is extremely interesting. Because mankind has been living on Earth for a long time, there are many useful and beautiful things that they created long ago.

  • @user-qu2pn3nk5n
    @user-qu2pn3nk5n Месяц назад

    Отличная работа

  • @Aussiesnrg
    @Aussiesnrg 11 месяцев назад +1

    That's awesome. Thanks for the video showing the work involved

  • @hephzibagrace3456
    @hephzibagrace3456 11 месяцев назад +1

    Looks great!!

  • @couerl
    @couerl 6 месяцев назад +1

    I made one too! Looks a lot like mine except I used black walnut on the tuning pegs and the tail piece is different. Lovely job!

  • @robertanderson2370
    @robertanderson2370 7 месяцев назад

    I made my first this year, after pouring over videos and articles. It was very reassuring to see that my methods turned out to be rather like yours. You've picked some gorgeous wood there. I'd love to see more of your work, and perhaps you might post a short melody once it has seasoned. Cheers!

    • @robertanderson2370
      @robertanderson2370 7 месяцев назад

      In answer to my own question ruclips.net/video/k88CyPqouUU/видео.html lol

  • @alexbarth7582
    @alexbarth7582 5 месяцев назад

    That’s amazing, thank you for making this video !
    Can I ask what kind of pin shaver and hole reamer you are using ? And where did you buy them?
    Thank you!

    • @westsaxoninwales
      @westsaxoninwales  5 месяцев назад

      I got the reamer and peg tapering block off ebay as a set. Unfortunately they don't seem to be available any more.

  • @bearshield7138
    @bearshield7138 Месяц назад

    you are quite the craftsman.
    Sweet job

  • @dougmc332
    @dougmc332 4 месяца назад

    Nice build! I was wondering where you find your strings.

  • @Seagull780
    @Seagull780 6 месяцев назад +1

    Was the main body beech or birch? The description says it's birch but then says the soundboard and fittings are also beech so I'm confused as to what it is.
    I'm really confused as to what wood makes a good lyre.

    • @westsaxoninwales
      @westsaxoninwales  5 месяцев назад

      The body and head are both Birch with a beech soundboard. I'd use any hardwood (deciduous or broad leaf) timber BUT try and get quarter sawn if you can. Through sawn timber will work but you'll need to make the head separately like I have in the video or the head will crack when you drill the holes for the tuning pegs.

    • @Seagull780
      @Seagull780 5 месяцев назад

      @westsaxoninwales1551 Thanks! I'll probably be stubborn and try making it in one piece from through sawn timber since I can get it for free with a bit more labour. I'm expecting it to crack since you seem to know your stuff, but I can always fit a new headstock after it does.

  • @eunac3037
    @eunac3037 Месяц назад

    this is so cool! I was thinking of building a lyre for a graduation project and I was wondering why the more professional lyre-makers I find on the internet do the top of part seperately and add it on later. Is it easier to cut and shape that way? 2:12 and onwards reference as to what I'm talking about. Sorry for the bother.

    • @westsaxoninwales
      @westsaxoninwales  Месяц назад

      So the reason for the head being separate to the body is due to how the board that the body comes from is sawn. I've found if the body comes from a "through sawn" board and the body and head are one piece the head will split when drilling for the tuning pegs, so you need to make the head separate and glue it on later.
      This isn't needed when the body is "quarter sawn" as the grain runs straight up the faces of the body.

    • @eunac3037
      @eunac3037 Месяц назад

      @@westsaxoninwales thank you!! I'll keep that in mind!

  • @measuretwicecutnice
    @measuretwicecutnice 6 месяцев назад +1

    hey man, did i meet you in Axminister tools? if not you it was someone else but ever since I sore the lyre he or you made iv been really wanting to make one myself.

    • @westsaxoninwales
      @westsaxoninwales  6 месяцев назад

      If it was the Cardiff store then quite possibly!
      There's a lot of info out there, hopefully this video helps!

  • @nicolasxilakis9274
    @nicolasxilakis9274 10 месяцев назад

    Hello, great Work, thanks a lot for sharing, for the inspirations! I was building a lyre, many years ago, based on the Trossing Lyre, made it from local cherry tree.... now i would like very much to build a Sutton Hoo style Lyre, maxbe with seven strings. The one you made here looks quit thick, the trossing lyre is about 2 cm thick. I think it is therefore, the Anglo-Saxon Lyre sounds a bit different. Would you mind sharing the length, width, thickness of this beautiful Instrument? I also have problems to find the right strings from Nylon for my Trossingen Lyre, maybe you can advice me something? Tank you... Greetings from Gmany

    • @westsaxoninwales
      @westsaxoninwales  10 месяцев назад

      Hello, thank you for your kind words!
      I do tend to make my instruments a little thicker than most people. It all depends on the dimensions of the wood I can easily get hold of.
      The dimensions of the one in this video are:
      660mm long
      185mm/165mm wide
      32mm thick
      I get my Flurocarbon strings from Michael J King, The Lyre Shop on Etsy, which I find to be very reliable and easy to play with.
      Hope this all helps 👍

    • @nicolasxilakis9274
      @nicolasxilakis9274 10 месяцев назад

      Thank you very much😊yes, this IT really helps!! Thanks for your kindness....keep on

  • @friedfish69
    @friedfish69 8 месяцев назад

    Where did you get the idea for a sound post?

    • @westsaxoninwales
      @westsaxoninwales  5 месяцев назад

      I bought plans from Michael J King on Etsy, the plans say to use a sound post. Some people use them, some don't.

  • @Gnomewoodworker
    @Gnomewoodworker 8 месяцев назад

    Awesome build, but you went to all the trouble to build it authentic and then used para cord instead of something like sinew for the tail piece. Also its easier to just build them like a guitar and use a back board instead of al that routing to hollow the body of the lyre. fantastic build and I Subbed

    • @friedfish69
      @friedfish69 8 месяцев назад

      Using a back board ain't authentic.

    • @Gnomewoodworker
      @Gnomewoodworker 8 месяцев назад

      @@friedfish69 no , but makes the lyre more durable to warping

  • @andrewwilson507
    @andrewwilson507 5 месяцев назад

    Can you not mount the camera on the work bench next time please.

    • @westsaxoninwales
      @westsaxoninwales  5 месяцев назад

      The phone I use to film is on a tripod which is sat on the bench.
      I've since moved house and have a larger workshop where I can place the tripod in more places and have a much more solid bench, so there shouldn't be so much wobbling in future videos.