I repair a 1934 A.E. Smith Violin - part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 22 июл 2024
  • Master Violin Maker Olaf Grawert repairs a beautiful 1934 A.E.Smith violin after the neck broke out during extremely high humidity. A.E Smith is one of the best known Australian violinmakers who's violins fetch up to $120,000.
    Part II here: • A E Smith 1934 Violin ...
    Be fully informed when you buy your next instrument. Get Olaf's free 7 essentials when buying an instrument report here: olafgrawertviolinstudio.com/7...
    Part 1
    00:00 Introduction
    00:43 What happened to the violin? And how I am going to fix it.
    02:05 Opening the top-plate and inspecting the inside
    08:41 Cleaning the inside of the violin
    09:40 Glue using clamping block
    13:00 Day 2 - 2nd step in gluing process - gluing the join
    17:28 Closer look at the inside of the instrument
    19:18 Gluing up violin
    22:53 Clean up glue
    23:22 Coffee time
    23:36 Taking clamps off violin
    24:48 Working on varnish on top-plate
    30:55 Retouching
    33:18 What else there is to do?
    33:54 Working on the neck
    34:45 Gluing the neck in
    37:05 Conclusion of part 1....what's to come in part 2
    Part II here: • A E Smith 1934 Violin ...
    #myviolinmaker, #olafgrawertviolin
    Website:
    www.olafgrawertviolinstudio.com
    Olaf's Salvatore Lombardi Violin:
    olafgrawertviolinstudio.com/s...
    Olaf's online Store:
    olafgrawertviolinstudio.com/p...
    Social:
    / olafgrawertviolinstudio
    / olafgrawertviolinstudi...
    Olaf Grawert also features in some @TwoSetViolin videos
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Комментарии • 151

  • @fnersch3367
    @fnersch3367 Год назад +48

    A. Smith was 54 years old when he made this violin. In 1919 he became an importer and manufacturer of stringed instruments. He lived to the age of 98. His violas are the most prized by musicians. Thank you for restoring this violin. May it play again!

  • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
    @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Год назад +18

    Hi Guys,
    I'm going to be a bit busy tonight, but I will try and join the chat for a bit towards the end of the video. Hope you like it :)
    Part 2 coming within a week!

    • @user-zl4dg5fg2o
      @user-zl4dg5fg2o Год назад

      Thanks Olaf :) I love your content, and I am SUPER excited for this video. It looks epic!

    • @bobbiecat7139
      @bobbiecat7139 Год назад

      Can't wait for part 2!

    • @ethanhe8608
      @ethanhe8608 Год назад

      You should pin this comment

  • @benjaminboyle7329
    @benjaminboyle7329 Год назад +31

    Filming myself doing something like this would make me so self conscious. It say a lot about the confidence you have in your work that you are comfortable showing all the details like this to the world. Its beautiful to watch.

    • @rossthefiddler5890
      @rossthefiddler5890 Год назад +1

      I've been filming myself & I'm reserving it for family members only. 😅

  • @spshc
    @spshc Год назад +3

    Happy Birthday Olaf, great video. 🎂🍨🍦🍰🧁

  • @zzp1
    @zzp1 24 дня назад

    I made an intensive study of the practice of Guarneri. Just Joseph. I had a couple of them in my hands heard the playing by a top musician. So I do know a tiny bit. There are a couple of hundreds Stradivari left, most of them just being beautiful chamber instruments, a very few able to used as a concert solo instrument. Maybe between 10-25b pcs according to Würlitzer standards. Basically Guarneri was a poor craftsman in Cremona, sometimes making parts for better situated violin builders in his street. His buyers were mostly carnival musicians, but even Viotti had a Guarneri, just for the sound of the instrument. Guarneri sold even blanks, i.e. unfinished and unvarnished instruments. He used to buy wood from old farms, cheap and weathered to the core. So, people trying to copy a Guarnerii is an hopless affair alltogether. A Guarneri del Jesù is a Guarneri del Jèsu. Just that. The very best instrument never reach the open market. They go from musician to musician. You could write a book about it.

  • @tonimcguire8588
    @tonimcguire8588 Год назад +10

    Thank you, Olaf. I’ve been able to better help my students on how to care for their instruments!

  • @today.2759
    @today.2759 Год назад

    Waiting for the next part😊😊happy birthday Olaf🎉🎉

  • @albertsystem1
    @albertsystem1 Год назад

    Always amazing that you're able chat while working, but also very cool seeing you concentrate while setting those clamps.

  • @nedheadwyoming
    @nedheadwyoming Год назад +1

    Happy Birthday Olaf!! This is a very interesting video, thanks!

  • @razvanbutiac7684
    @razvanbutiac7684 Год назад

    Well Olaf... happy birthday!!! Grate video, really enjoy your work.

  • @edmiller4149
    @edmiller4149 Год назад

    Expert repair and restoration from the “Master” ! Thanks Olaf.

  • @surlyogre1476
    @surlyogre1476 10 месяцев назад

    Happy Birthday, Olaf. Many happy returns of the day.

  • @TheKat430
    @TheKat430 Год назад +5

    Happy Birthday Olaf!! Wishing you a great day! Love all your wonderful videos.

  • @IgarashiDai
    @IgarashiDai Год назад +1

    Happy belated birthday Olaf! 🥳 Here’s to another 30+ years of you being awesome 💪

  • @michelevolz7769
    @michelevolz7769 Год назад +1

    Happy birthday!! Beautiful fiddle, glad you are working on it!

  • @lotsabirds
    @lotsabirds Год назад

    Fabulous work, as always!

  • @MichaelM69
    @MichaelM69 Год назад +5

    Thank you for all you do and Happy Birthday Olaf!! Will be upgrading my violin in a few months and I know exactly what to look for thanks to your valuable information! You're the best :)

  • @lorainialindberry3013
    @lorainialindberry3013 Год назад +3

    Good morning, Olaf. Beautiful violin. I really love watching you work.

  • @bradykelso8682
    @bradykelso8682 7 месяцев назад

    I’m completely hooked. Going to brew a cup of coffee before watching part two! Cheers, Olaf!

  • @jamesluff8415
    @jamesluff8415 Год назад +1

    Always great to see your process, Olaf. And also great to see that you take exactly the same level of care for a student violin as you do a $100,000 one. Not sure about that coffee recipe though!

  • @marknichols7861
    @marknichols7861 Год назад

    I modified my perspective on violin making and the handling of the wood, varnish, etc. watching your videos.
    I am becoming “less afraid” of the wood and the structure of the violin - hard to describe, but your method, from years of experience, instills a confidence I was reluctant to embrace.
    Thanks for that “gift”.

  • @mellissadalby1402
    @mellissadalby1402 3 месяца назад

    I like to watch you, Olaf at your bench in the workshop. I have seen you do many amazing repairs that I would have thought were not possible. I find it greatly inspiring and it makes me feel happy that you have rescued so many otherwise potentially lost instruments. They went from very sad to glad, thanks to your skillset and ability.

  • @yoonjiswag1967
    @yoonjiswag1967 Год назад +1

    Happy Birthday Olaf 🥰🎂🎉

  • @persistentcat
    @persistentcat Год назад

    Drinking coffee over the violin is the last thing I expect a professional violin maker to do😆

  • @thierrylemoult3695
    @thierrylemoult3695 Год назад +1

    Thank you Olaf for this video. I really like see how you done the repair. Very nice Violon. A French amator violinmaker.

  • @ald00I
    @ald00I Год назад +5

    i really appreciate these videos because im always a bit scared to bring my viola to a luthier for fear that itll get ruined (its not even worth super much, it just means a lot to me) but getting a peak behind the scenes really helped! im currently researching luthiers around my area :)

  • @TNungesser
    @TNungesser Год назад

    Happy birthday Olaf! 5 months ago

  • @jerrycratsenberg989
    @jerrycratsenberg989 7 месяцев назад

    Lovely, thanks for sharing

  • @PMFan0
    @PMFan0 Год назад

    Happy Bday Mr Olaf!

  • @tanjasofieschndorff193
    @tanjasofieschndorff193 Год назад

    Thanks for another great video!!

  • @thecaptainsunchained
    @thecaptainsunchained Год назад +1

    Absolute pleasure to watch.
    Can't stop picturing how TwoSet would mess up if they were tasked with this.

  • @mikegreen8517
    @mikegreen8517 Год назад

    Happy birthday Olaf!

  • @nathangill
    @nathangill Год назад

    I'd love a closer look at those clamps! Looks way more today than individual spool clamps!

  • @rossthefiddler5890
    @rossthefiddler5890 Год назад

    Happy birthday & thanks Olaf. My BD was enjoying food the next day after a colonoscopy. 😉 It was interesting seeing the inside of this A E Smith violin. I am finishing a violin I had started (I won't say how long ago) for my son's birthday & I had the belly ready for purfling with the channels cut & now I'm close to marking & cutting the back for purfling too. I had the peg box & scroll completed too, however it is always nice to see little ideas used by other makers as I progress & can take on some of those ideas. I'm refreshing my memory for the small details as I pick it up again (I've been repairing & setting up instruments since I started though). I'm using the 'Betts' Strad pattern as a guide although making it to a longer model (4-5mm longer).
    With this A E Smith violin the middle section inside the back looks like it has been brushed with something. I wonder if that was from later repairers brushing through the sound holes? Also, with the varnish chipping off, I've found that with some varnishes of early 1900's factory instruments if spilled glue is left it just takes the varnish off, but I wonder, could A E Smith have used water glass treatment (ref: Sacconi) on the outside? I tried it on my first violin I made, just because I could. 😊

  • @edwardpetersen4309
    @edwardpetersen4309 Год назад

    Happy Birthday, Olaf.

  • @wakingtheworld
    @wakingtheworld Год назад +2

    You've had weeks of rain, Olaf. Meanwhile we've got an ongoing, now serious, drought situation (southern U.K.); weeks and weeks without rain and food shortages on the horizon... Fascinating vid as always. Lovely to watch a master craftsman at work and yes, if you truly love the work you do, it's hardly classed as 'work' and that's the way it should be! There are sadly far too many unhappy, unfulfilled and frustrated peeps out there...

    • @antopac4067
      @antopac4067 Год назад

      The amount of rain is feels pretty normal as August is technically winter in Australia

  • @thomapple
    @thomapple 10 месяцев назад

    13:08 waiving around the coffee mug on top of the violin had me very anxious, if it was me I could not have a single liquid container in the same room :P

  • @publicclammer
    @publicclammer Год назад +1

    Fascinating!!

  • @Mission_Harmony
    @Mission_Harmony Год назад

    I am a retired MD & woodworker. Building & repairing a bunch of chunks of wood that are not only aesthetic visually but come to life to sing as well is the final frontier of the art. I want to build one. Impressive surgery Olaf.

  • @ALAPINO
    @ALAPINO Год назад +1

    Perhaps the rosin build up caused a higher adhesion to the collapsed finger board to the varnish and the now moistened spruce released the varnish from beneath. Just a wild guess.
    At any rate, always fun to watch your process.

  • @mccypr
    @mccypr Год назад

    Good stuff! I’m slowly getting ready to do Violin regraduation/refurbishment as a (player’s) hobby. I ordered a separation knife and got the wrong one for Violin. It has an eight inch blade versus being eight inches long. I don’t think it’s that big of a deal. I can simply hold it just past the hilt. Thanks! 😎

  • @RobertFay
    @RobertFay 10 месяцев назад

    *- I missed **15:27** when you first wet your knife and then dipped it into the glue to use it as your gluing brush, and then again at **15:48**.*
    *- I guess you have shown and taught your viewers this before, but I am a newbie.*
    *- I am surprised that the knife delivers enough glue for your satisfaction.*
    *- I imagined torch heating a used blade and forging mini-peening golf-ball dimpling into the surface to carry a slicking of glue into the crack like grooving a Babbitt bearing surface to travel grease onto an axle.*

  • @kyproset
    @kyproset Год назад +9

    Thank you Olaf for the video. Smith was a British-trained luthier who emigrated to Australia. I've never played on one, but I suspect he was the first good luthier to be in Australia at the right time. Undoubtedly he was a good maker like other British contemporaries and I wonder whether his instruments would have been as valuable had he stayed in England. Please educate me.

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Год назад +5

      Absolutely not.
      He was training as an engineer but loved violins. He started making in his mid teens.
      He was at the right place at the right time and became Australia's best known maker.
      That's why they're so valuable

    • @kyproset
      @kyproset Год назад +2

      @@AskOlaftheViolinmaker Thank you for the answer, I cannot wait to hear it after it's finished. One more question, The bass bar as you said is the original, signed by Smith. Is a bass bar good for the life of the instrument if carved correctly, or does it need replacing after some years? Thank you for your insight.

    • @keithcitizen4855
      @keithcitizen4855 Год назад

      According to Kitty Smith his daughter , Arthur had a shop in Hunter St Sydney and top artists would not want anyone else working on their instruments when they were in town - you had to be Smith trained to be any good?

  • @user-zl4dg5fg2o
    @user-zl4dg5fg2o Год назад

    Yooo! Looks like an amazing vid

  • @ahh1180
    @ahh1180 Год назад

    Another great Australian luthier of our time is Harry Vatiliotis an incredible violin maker

  • @EssEss77
    @EssEss77 Год назад

    Happy birthday Olaf

  • @PidokJacob
    @PidokJacob Год назад

    Queensland?...LOVE THE BUTTER!

  • @CalixtoPrimeiro
    @CalixtoPrimeiro Год назад +5

    When I saw the two halves of the violin coming out of the case I probably should have worrying whether they could ever be transformed into one playable instrument again, but actually I was only wondering whether the insurance company will consider this a case of water damage, since it isn't caused by liquid water but by humidity 🙃

  • @LC-th1hy
    @LC-th1hy Год назад

    Amazing how the author of the violin would stamp his name all over inside the violin! How you take apart the violin is not scary since you do it with so much security and care.

  • @nickyork8901
    @nickyork8901 11 месяцев назад +1

    Fascinating video on a beautiful instrument. It's so interesting to see how a properly trained restorer goes about a job like this. Would love to see more like this one.

  • @yngveskarphedinssons
    @yngveskarphedinssons Год назад

    My Father has an Australian Made Violin ( Buck 1937 ) who was an english immigrant and had his workshop in Collins street Melbourne in the day!

  • @ghlscitel6714
    @ghlscitel6714 Год назад +6

    Learning again from you, thanks, Sir!
    Did you know the type of varnish by experience or did you analyse it's nature prior to retouching?
    Is it a Schellack varnish or an oil based varnish?

  • @DapperDebonair9820
    @DapperDebonair9820 Год назад

    Hi Olaf! What violin in your workshop would you recommend for a person who wants a loud sound. This video was very informative and interesting, I absolutely cannot wait for part 2!

  • @teodelfuego
    @teodelfuego 9 месяцев назад

    Interesting to see that the violin maker relic-ed the instrument

  • @terry1965
    @terry1965 Месяц назад

    I've been building for some time now Olaf and I've never seen varnish do that

  • @grandmestredespoulpes2435
    @grandmestredespoulpes2435 Год назад +4

    00:01 Well, here in France/Germany/england we have our worst drought ever registered.
    We'd take a few bottles of water with pleasure, do not hesitate to send us a few clouds !
    edit after I saw the video : of course, great video :)

    • @wakingtheworld
      @wakingtheworld Год назад +1

      I mentioned our drought too (UK based).... For the first time ever I'm craving rain on my skin and will probably stand in it and get soaked when it does happen. Everything is so dry with temperatures well in the 30's and even in the 40's... 'Yellow, children, is now for grass'

    • @grandmestredespoulpes2435
      @grandmestredespoulpes2435 Год назад

      @@wakingtheworld Less than 24 hours after the post we finally get our first rain in 2-3 months where I live, obviously Olaf have been very prompt to access my request. The rain isn't nation wide and I really hope our burning forest will receive a few drops soon but it's still very good.
      I really wish you'll have some rain soon !

    • @wakingtheworld
      @wakingtheworld Год назад +1

      @@grandmestredespoulpes2435 Wow! He's far more than just a violin-maker and restorer then! Gosh that's good but sadly, it'll take more than one bit o'rain to solve the situation. We continue to burn here... 31 degrees out here today though a chance of 'light rain' on Tuesday and thunderstorms on Wed. The ground needs the gentle stuff not the lashing rain though any rain will help fill our river(s)...

  • @CraigBothamassagetherapist
    @CraigBothamassagetherapist 10 месяцев назад

    Unemployment was just over 30% in Australia during the great depression! WOW! It's way higher than that here in RSA, and that is just counting the people who are looking for work, not the people who have basically given up looking.

  • @zapa1pnt
    @zapa1pnt Год назад

    Wow. The backside of that instrument is some Really beautiful maple. 🤩🤩😘

  • @randolphfriend8260
    @randolphfriend8260 Год назад

    Oh, yeah! Much Happy "too late to mention in now" Birthday!!!! 🎉

  • @bldallas
    @bldallas 11 месяцев назад

    $100,000 Australian is roughly (edited to correct) $64,000 US. Holy cow, you not only are a master violin maker, but you’ve got balls of steel!!! I can’t imagine having the knowledge and confidence to crack open an instrument of that value. Bravo!

    • @freefall8243
      @freefall8243 11 месяцев назад

      I think you have the conversion backwards. 100,000 Aus would equal about 64,000 US.

    • @bldallas
      @bldallas 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@freefall8243 you’re right; I went back and corrected it, thanks! Still a damn expensive fiddle.

  • @drandrewtan
    @drandrewtan Год назад

    Happy Birthday Olaf!
    It's always interesting to see an AE Smith violin, especially on the inside!
    Question: what did you add into your coffee after the extraction, but before mixing it up? It's a liquid and some blocks of butter?

  • @PidokJacob
    @PidokJacob Год назад

    FIRE SPRUCE PATTERN IS SO COOL...

  • @Misrabelle
    @Misrabelle Год назад +1

    As the owner of a 1937 A.E. Smith violin, just watching that top plate coming off was making me queasy.

  • @joshward7896
    @joshward7896 Год назад

    It's my Birthday too, Yeah!

  • @stevev5510
    @stevev5510 Год назад +2

    just wondering if you know where the wood for a 1934 Australian violin came from. I have heard some guitar makers are using Australian timber these days. non traditional, but very beautiful and suitable.

  • @chipcurry
    @chipcurry Год назад

    Good effort, but you need to use close-up shots. Many of the things you described, for instance the Stradivarius symbol and the supports along the edge were not Visible. If you shoot in 4K, you will have enough resolution to magnify part of the screen in post. But the best thing to do is to go back and re-shoot the close-ups As B roll.

  • @user-oh2zx6kk2u
    @user-oh2zx6kk2u 6 месяцев назад

    I have worked by birthday since 1986. So the last 38 years.

  • @Creationhorse
    @Creationhorse Год назад

    I'm wondering what had been applied to the inside center area of the back plate?

  • @SteenWinther
    @SteenWinther 8 месяцев назад

    I never knew that violins need service 🤔
    'We have been trying to call you regarding your violin's extended warrenty' 😄

  • @voxer3688
    @voxer3688 Год назад

    Hi Olaf, very interesting! Could you explain why an instrument’s varnish is sacred? I’d love to know more. Thanks.

  • @jazzouchejazzouche5827
    @jazzouchejazzouche5827 Год назад

    A few years ago a was doing a String Quartet gig at Double Bay Sydney.
    My Violin was stolen. It was a beautiful A E Smith,an early one,1906 made in Malden but
    it played beautifully and looked great
    If anyone knows anything about it,leave something in the comments .

  • @bertfabillo
    @bertfabillo 9 месяцев назад

    Man I appreciate your videos. I suggest that you use a microphone so that you are more audible

  • @Double-Yew-Bee
    @Double-Yew-Bee Год назад +1

    New camera? Super crisp resolution on this video.

  • @MarioGuillermoOrdunaRobles
    @MarioGuillermoOrdunaRobles Месяц назад

    Hi olaf, i just have a question. For re varnishing a violin do you have to get rid of the previous varnish? or only make the cleaning and put a new layer over the old one?
    Thank you i like your videos!

  • @Crenom
    @Crenom 9 месяцев назад

    When cleaning the inside the violin, is that just water you are brushing? I was going to use naptha just trying to adopt a do-no-harm method.

  • @SnapCracklePapa
    @SnapCracklePapa Год назад

    Is there a way to figuratively have rain?

  • @liamnevilleviolist1809
    @liamnevilleviolist1809 Год назад +1

    Why did Smith's neck break out though? Original neck... or did someone *else* glue it "back in" badly. If so: why did they need to glue it back in?
    The answer had better be: the owner flew from Australia to Singapore, to Antarctica, then to Malaysia, then to the Arctic, then back to Australia ... where it currently is...! ;)

  • @BI-11y_TheStormTrooper
    @BI-11y_TheStormTrooper 6 месяцев назад

    Why don't you use a blow dryer to heat up the resin/glue ?

  • @danday457
    @danday457 Год назад

    oooh what’s that bass in the background?

  • @ronwehnau5317
    @ronwehnau5317 Год назад

    In gluing the side to the top block, I was curious why you didn't put a clamp on both sides of the block? Am I just overthinking the process here?

  • @conradgittins4476
    @conradgittins4476 Год назад +1

    I was confronted with a violin that had come apart in a similar way and then re assembled with hot glue from a glue gun! It came apart again. Luckily it wasn't a valuable violin. I turned down the repair because I wasn't certain that I could remove all traces of hot glue and be confident that hide glue would work.

  • @battistazani8202
    @battistazani8202 Год назад

    27:00 now we know from where the "relic" started. 😅

  • @WJSpies
    @WJSpies 10 месяцев назад

    Some turpentine to clean it.. Teitbond and crazy glue, a bit of epoxy, with a heavy coat of marine grade spar varnish, and waxy polish; it'll be just like new.

  • @DrJugne
    @DrJugne 11 месяцев назад +1

    I am curious as to the glue you are using? I could not find any reference to it. You seem to use an old jam jar to heat the glue?

    • @mercoid
      @mercoid 11 месяцев назад +1

      I believe it is hide glue which is often too syrupy to work with unless heated.

    • @DrJugne
      @DrJugne 11 месяцев назад

      @@mercoid Thank you very much. That helped me finding the information I was looking for: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_glue#Hide%20glue I found the German language version a bit more enlightening: de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutinleim (use Google Translate or equivalent to convert to English)

  • @chrispbacon3042
    @chrispbacon3042 11 месяцев назад

    Interesting listening to a Queenslander commenting on the cold...😂😅😊

  • @johnsanabria3279
    @johnsanabria3279 Год назад

    I really like your t-shirt with your logo on it. Is it possible to get one,and do they come in different colors?

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Год назад

      I'm not really huge on Merch, but I'll see if we can put it on tspring or similar... That way you could choose colour

    • @johnsanabria3279
      @johnsanabria3279 Год назад

      @@AskOlaftheViolinmaker Thanks.....that's very nice of you.

  • @liamnevilleviolist1809
    @liamnevilleviolist1809 9 месяцев назад

    34:50 -just wondering why the varnish is SO dark under the fingerboard.... I know the old masters varnished the whole top and the placed the fingerboard on.... but then wouldn't;t the whole violin be slightly darker? Certainly not blonde... curious.

    • @notepadpowersnail1860
      @notepadpowersnail1860 8 месяцев назад

      It’s probably just antiquing. Painted to look older than it is.

    • @nickiemcnichols5397
      @nickiemcnichols5397 7 месяцев назад

      Olaf said that the ebony fingerboard had rested on the top for a while, when it was damp.

  • @khajiitkitten5679
    @khajiitkitten5679 Год назад

    WHERE CAN I GET ONE OF THOSE AWESOME SHIRTS YOU'RE WEARING?

    • @AskOlaftheViolinmaker
      @AskOlaftheViolinmaker  Год назад

      With my Logo?
      Looking at doing small amount of merch soon. I also have violin cleaning cloths with my logo.

  • @francoisvillon1300
    @francoisvillon1300 Год назад

    Дерево для дек ввозите из Европы или из местных эвкалиптов делаете?

  • @Mark-lf9cn
    @Mark-lf9cn Год назад

    When does "Olaf the Barista" channel start?

  • @BeckVMH
    @BeckVMH Год назад

    That seems quite a bit of trauma suffered by a valuable violin along with various repairs, apparently some not up to standard for such a quality instrument. How does this occur?

  • @EmilianoGirina
    @EmilianoGirina 8 месяцев назад

    Am I wrong or do you have some music in background, don't you? minute 09:10

  • @erzefranz3470
    @erzefranz3470 9 месяцев назад

    If the water isn't solid, it's not cold yet.

  • @simongough-brown9439
    @simongough-brown9439 10 месяцев назад

    Zoom out so we can see you AND the workpiece.

  • @robertnicholson7733
    @robertnicholson7733 Год назад

    Hi, If it is not a secret where do you get your pearl glue, and what was the varnish you used? My usual supplier has let me down recently with dry shellac that was pretty much past its use-by date when sent to me, so I view all products as suspect now, pretty hard to get that trust back. These days, there appears to be pearl glue, and then there is Pearl Glue!
    Raspberry jam jar in, what, a stainless steel mixing bowl for the glue heater - a classic. But what were you using in the bowl to transfer the heat, was it wax?
    I almost dropped my hot chocky when I saw you using red handled, two dollar shop, Chinese F clamps. They seem to work okay, but don't you find the thread a bit too coarse?
    Brissy when it is wet, yuk. There was one year, in the early 90s, when it just rained all winter, what a misery, I could not get dry. I live down the GC now, humidity has been through the roof lately.

  • @jcthejfreak
    @jcthejfreak Год назад

    Those clamps are as old as me!

  • @umuttosun4879
    @umuttosun4879 Год назад

    I wonder if Olaf ever spilled his coffee on expensive violins before :)

  • @johnalexander301
    @johnalexander301 Год назад

    A.E. Smith suffered a stoke in 1954. He continued making instruments afterwards but the quality was not nearly as good.

  • @pippikrumeluss5167
    @pippikrumeluss5167 Год назад +2

    If Eddy just knew, there could be cockroach nests in violins!😱😱😱

  • @carlpbrill
    @carlpbrill 4 месяца назад

    did you put butter in your coffee?