Modern F Hole Vs. Vintage Oval Hole Mandolin Comparison

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  • Опубликовано: 29 авг 2024
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Комментарии • 143

  • @marklozano8388
    @marklozano8388 4 года назад +58

    Not just any oval holed mandolin, that's a 24' snakehead. arguably the best sounding of the old gibson A models.

    • @davevann1730
      @davevann1730 4 года назад +11

      and that F hole is not any F hole mando. Ellis mandolins mandolins are world class and start in the $6000 range new

    • @StopFear
      @StopFear 3 года назад +3

      Best sounding? In what sense? Or according to whom? I am asking a sincere question. Did anyone collectively grade or rate their sound?

  • @nikosz66
    @nikosz66 4 года назад +72

    The round hole one has a fuller and more bass sound .

  • @heatheralice1974
    @heatheralice1974 4 года назад +11

    Thank you. I was assigned as a violist but I identify as a mandolinist. Finally figured out why oval appeals to me when so many more experienced players encouraged me to seriously consider f-hole.
    Bowed instruments have better sustain than plucked. The oval has better sustain.
    Violas are the poorest projecting of the violin family. So I get that there's a trade off between sustain and projection, but I don't think that worries me bc I'm already used to that from playing viola.
    I'm not in the vintage gibson price range. I'm looking for my first step up from a walmart bargain deal I started on bc I wasn't sure I wanted to do this. But 2 years in I 💜💜💜 playing mandolin, and I think the oval hole is the mandolin for converted viola players. :)

    • @1970banjoman
      @1970banjoman 3 года назад +2

      Just now read this, Did you ever pick an upgrade?

  • @DylanGladstoneMusic
    @DylanGladstoneMusic 4 года назад +13

    I like both sounds.
    I have two mandolins, a Kentucky 505 f-hole and an Eastman 404 oval hole. I switch back and forth depending on what tune I'm playing.

    • @douglasarnold5310
      @douglasarnold5310 2 года назад +1

      That's what I was thinking I like both depending on song. I just have a bowel back and I like it, I am just starting with the mandolin...

  • @oregonoutback7779
    @oregonoutback7779 4 года назад +5

    Excellent comparison video. F-hole sounded brighter & sharper, while the A was warmer, with deeper bass. I have owned many vintage Gibson A style and love that sound. Even had a '13 F-4 for a bit. My favorite was a '24 A1 Snakehead, blackface. That one stole my heart, for sure. Thanks again for doing this comparison.

  • @apetass123
    @apetass123 4 года назад +35

    It was a helpful comparison, thanks! Now I know I definitely wants an oval hole mandolin. You said it might not hold up to that classic bluegrass chop, and that's a relief, because it seems that everything I play on my f hole mandolin ends up sounding a bit bluegrassy! No disrespect towards bluegrass, but I play Swedish folk music and for that I prefer the fuller, bassier sound.

    • @marklozano8388
      @marklozano8388 4 года назад +2

      I agree, I have that very 24' snakehead mandolin (mine's black) and that fuller sound is nicer for folk music.That was a good tip on the picks, my mando does'nt care for anything thicker than a 1.21. I play swedish music too, also old timey and mazurka tunes.Great stuff

    • @rocker99908
      @rocker99908 3 года назад

      I play pretty much modern music- far from the bluegrass and country styles. Do you think an oval hole would better suit me? I dislike the almost whiney sound of the higher strings on my f hole Mando.

    • @Jasper_4444
      @Jasper_4444 3 года назад

      @@rocker99908 Then maybe you need a lower tuned instrument, like a mandola (which is a fifth lower than a mandolin) or an octave mandolin (an octave lower than a mandolin).

    • @gunscratch
      @gunscratch 2 года назад

      I think you’re right. F holes are great in a band, and hard to beat because they cut right through the mix. That’s why you can put a good one right up against a banjo and still hear it. But for solo, folkie type stuff I really prefer the mellower sound of the oval hole. That being said, I once had the privilege of playing an old Gibson A-style oval hole mandolin and it was something else entirely. They are incredible instruments and sound amazing in and of themselves so it’s really hard to do direct comparisons as they are all unique.

  • @terrencedow2925
    @terrencedow2925 Год назад +2

    Although they both sound good, the old timer has a distinguished sound and more bass to it than the other. When it got to about the 5:08 mark it seemed like the old man started calling the other, a young whipper snapper! Youngin got sent to bed, but had dinner!😉👍🤣

  • @StevDoesBigJumps
    @StevDoesBigJumps 4 месяца назад +1

    The roundhole has has an interesting guitar-esque punch when you hit the low strings.

  • @slantt12
    @slantt12 4 года назад +3

    Long time oval hole admirer and player here. Nothing like the Gibson A series from the early 19 teens to '24/'25 snake heads. Nothing like that deeper sound off the low register..

  • @erincooley8682
    @erincooley8682 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for this!! I had myself convinced I wanted an oval hole mandolin and everyone thought I was being picky, but I was right!!

  • @BobboByrnes
    @BobboByrnes 4 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for this. I've been looking to get a new/old mandolin as my 1930's Kalamazoo is cracking in it's 4th place. I love the sound of the old Gibsons but had never thought about getting an oval hole mando until I saw this video. Now that is what I will be looking for! Thank you!

  • @elizabethpodboy4124
    @elizabethpodboy4124 3 года назад

    Thank you so much for taking the time for us to hear these two sounds sode by side. Appreciated

  • @WC_Beer_Reviews
    @WC_Beer_Reviews 4 года назад +2

    I'm an oval hole kinda guy myself. I appreciate the open, fuller sound of that lower register. An F-4 style is my dream mando. But I'm a lefty so affordable options are limited.

  • @rickpick9058
    @rickpick9058 4 года назад +2

    Excellent video. I slightly but consistently preferred the sound of the oval hole, except when fingering chop chords. Then the preference for one over the other was extreme. So as a bluegrass picker on a Weber Fern f hole, I can remain content! I think the many, many decades of mellowing tone maybe gave the oval hole its advantage for many picking styles, not so much just the hole shape.

  • @georgespiess7216
    @georgespiess7216 4 года назад +1

    I find myself accompanying more folk guitarists these days and was looking to replace my A style F hole with an oval. But I recently found an Eastman 815V (F style, F hole, hand rubbed varnish) that has the best sustain I've ever heard coming from an F hole while still having a very sharp and loud chop. It's really changed my thinking about mandolin tone and I've received a lot of compliments on the sound. I also use the heavy Dunlops.
    Both of those instruments are sweet, but that Gibson is just to die for. Very nice!

  • @Gatorlandtraditional
    @Gatorlandtraditional 3 года назад

    This is a really great comparison. It’s nice to hear the two side by side playing the same piece so you can really understand the difference.
    Now I’m thinking most of what I’m playing would be better suited for the oval hole, which I’ve never really considered.
    Thanks for doing this.

  • @namentatic4978
    @namentatic4978 4 года назад +1

    I have both kind of mandolins and can say that oval hole mandolin has more powerful sound, stronger bass, and generally attacky, louder.
    F-hole mandolin has softer and more bluesy sound.
    It depends which kind of music to play, which kind of wood it made. Pattern of braces construction inside, even how much of glue is used, how many paint layers are applied on.
    The same as everything, mandolin is in the ears and eyes of the beholder.

  • @robw95
    @robw95 4 года назад +1

    Love the sound of that Gibson

  • @effdpaul1815
    @effdpaul1815 3 года назад +2

    That old mandolin has had a lot more time to mellow. They are both very different instruments ... and probably different in materials and construction techniques. It is had to attribute the obvious differences in tone to the differences in sound holes. A better comparison would be between a F-Hole A Style Mandolin and an Oval Hole A Style Mandolin of the same manufacturer and the same materials, finishes and Age of course. Thanks for the demo. I must admit that, to my ears, I like the sound of the Gibson.

  • @namealreadytakennamealread493
    @namealreadytakennamealread493 3 года назад

    I'm getting a mandoline for my birthday, your video are a great help, appreciate your videos, your a great teacher

  • @quigley4440
    @quigley4440 3 года назад +2

    Great sounds regardless of the f/hole. Intesting to me is how the sound of the strings change when you play an open string compared to fretted strings. We spend hours finding the right pick(s) style of mandolin, but nothing about balancing the sound of the strings. Look at instruments made in Europe and other places that use a zero fret which takes this balance into account. Classical bowl backed mandolins - zero frets mostly. I talked with a local luthier about a zero fret in making me a mandolin and he had zero knowledge of it. Pun intended. It simplifies the whole nut installation process and makes fretting the 1st fret so much easier with less pressure. Sorry for running on with this subject.

  • @ronniecraft3895
    @ronniecraft3895 4 года назад +1

    oval has more woody sound,and more projection. great info,thanks for sharing !!

  • @faerieSAALE
    @faerieSAALE 4 года назад +30

    The Gibson has a much more mellow and richer tone.

    • @davevann1730
      @davevann1730 4 года назад +8

      which is wonderful playing alone or with just one more instrument, but when you get into an ensemble situation the clarity and cut of the F hole mandolin is much better in the mix.

    • @georgechristie9464
      @georgechristie9464 4 года назад +4

      @@davevann1730 Stole my Thunder Dave.... exactly what I was gonna add.....

    • @guyluca7361
      @guyluca7361 4 года назад

      Gibson!

    • @clawhammer704
      @clawhammer704 3 года назад +1

      You gets these two in a bluegrass band with a driving banjo and you'll see fast why most bluegrass mandolinist want the F hole variety....

  • @drfred1203
    @drfred1203 2 года назад

    They played out about the way I thought they would.
    Thanks for the video!

  • @joewoodrum5160
    @joewoodrum5160 4 года назад +14

    The Gibson has a larger sound. The Gibson also appears to be very good no matter the genre you're playing. At least with my ears and the speakers I'm hearing it through.

  • @donhall-aquitania1025
    @donhall-aquitania1025 4 года назад +11

    The Gibson was way better for me. Maybe in 80 years the Ellis will sound as good.

  • @alanradecki8903
    @alanradecki8903 4 года назад

    I have an F-hole, having an oval hole A-style built by Elloree Guitars, can't wait to hear how it sounds and compares....seeing this gives me hope, loved the sound of that old Gibson!

  • @dmitrymalinowski8101
    @dmitrymalinowski8101 4 года назад +5

    I would use "f-hole" for strumming and the second-one for soloing, in terms of studio work.

    • @AlGuitarist
      @AlGuitarist 4 года назад +4

      I personally feel the opposite. f-hole has more clear/defined tone for each note while oval hole has fuller sound when playing chords. However, I think it's very situational i.e. genre of music
      Also, each instrument sound different, so..

  • @earlelfrink
    @earlelfrink 4 года назад +4

    That is the strongest voiced oval hole Gibson A that I have heard both for amplitude and tone. Good one!

    • @oregonoutback7779
      @oregonoutback7779 4 года назад +3

      Those Loar era A's were special. I have owned a bunch of teens vintage A's, then came into a '24 A1 black face, snakehead. It was amazing. I also owned a 1913 F4 at the time, so many comparisons happened. Loved them both, but continually gravitated to the '24 Loar era A1. It may well be the sweetest mandolin I've ever owned.

  • @clayton56tube
    @clayton56tube 4 года назад +10

    oval hole more delicate, f hole more focused and direct

  • @peterjames2580
    @peterjames2580 4 года назад

    The other difference between the two : 1.The Ellis is a longer scale. 2.The Bracing. Fun Show! Thanks again!

  • @dobrodoc
    @dobrodoc 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for that video! It was really informative. I went to your class at FH. Enjoy your teaching

  • @jimmymahone5420
    @jimmymahone5420 3 года назад

    A thought-provoking comparison. Perhaps you could borrow a pair of new mandolins of the same brand and model, one F and one A, to give a closer apples-to-apples comparison. Still, you provide wonderful videos and I'm glad to be one of your contributors. Keep up the good work and stay safe and healthy!

  • @ninahahler9810
    @ninahahler9810 4 года назад

    The best sounding mandolins I have found for a couple hundred bucks are the WW1 design flat rat hole..sent to the troups ... a round hole and a thin flat body, but they sound amazing..this cool old guy makes them in Missouri..I have 4 now..really bright tone and made here

  • @vampolascott36
    @vampolascott36 3 года назад +3

    The F style mandolin sounds like it's being played on a tiny pocket transistor radio speaker. The Gibson has a full sound.

  • @DisHammerhand
    @DisHammerhand 3 года назад

    I love the warmth of that Gibson.

  • @cameronurnes8355
    @cameronurnes8355 2 года назад

    Thank you, this is really cool. I also have a 1921 A2 and a modern F hole A model Morris mandolin. I think the comparisons are pretty similar. I really like the Morris because it has a radius fretboard so for me, it seems easier to play. Once again, thanks.

  • @slw59
    @slw59 4 года назад

    Love the sound of that Gibson.

  • @nickevans417
    @nickevans417 3 года назад

    I don't own a mando (yet!) but the difference seems to be the same as for guitars. F-hole guitars were made not for the tone but to be louder so they could be heard in jazz bands, like the banjo it replaced. So it makes sense that the oval hole has a sound more like a flat topped guitar. I think when the time comes I will go for oval holed.

  • @libracordial
    @libracordial Год назад

    Very helpful video! I love the old Gibson sound for more of a folksy, early ‘70s Elton (Davey Johnstone) sound.

  • @Lumors
    @Lumors 4 года назад

    Ooooh, that oval hole one sounds so sweet and warm! I bought an f-hole, but as far as I can remember back, it is not easy to buy a decent oval hole for a decent price in Europe.* Or any mandolin, but f-holes tend to be kinda available.
    *I didn't want to deal with customs to order from the US...

  • @sbearly
    @sbearly 4 года назад +10

    To what extent is the sound differences between the instruments positively due to the hole differences? I'm a guitar player and most acoustic guitars have round holes but the differences in their voices can be as great or greater than the differences between these two mandos.

  • @annebeck58
    @annebeck58 4 года назад

    Yeah, Baron, I think mine is an A-hole, for sure.
    It definitely sounds different from the F-hole.
    Anyway, I am starting to like it, a lot more, now that I have learned to mute the g-string. (I also wrapped the bottom of all strings with leather strips.)

  • @ThreeChordGuitar
    @ThreeChordGuitar 4 года назад +1

    Great job, man. Thank you

  • @PoulHansenDK
    @PoulHansenDK 3 года назад

    Very well executed demo. Especially the scales, even very high up; I only miss a few slow chords.
    Your demo is very useful for evaluation of the instruments, contrary to most others, that just hammer away, trying to demonstrate their own prowess and not that of the instrument.
    Thank You.
    And now start filling the piggy bank, for a Gibson A oval hole, before Loar ;-)

  • @manudeteruel
    @manudeteruel 4 года назад +1

    Happy new year! I’d prefer the old one!

  • @bopbopbobert
    @bopbopbobert 4 года назад +7

    1924 Snakehead, Loar era. Does it have a Virzi in it. I would expect any 96 year old Gibson is going to sound very different than one only ten years old. They both sound very nice. I'll take the Gibson, please.

    • @KevinWale
      @KevinWale 3 года назад

      I was thinking while watching that it wouldn't have sounded as good as it does today when it was new. It's got so much aging and drying and other wonderful things that time does to wood happening,. The newer F hole one sounds great, but it's not really a fair comparison just because a 10 year old 20 thousand dollar mandolin won't sound anywhere near as good as it will 100 years from now.

    • @marklozano8388
      @marklozano8388 3 года назад

      @@KevinWale modern makers strive to acheive that aged sound iwithout waiting around for it, and some come do it, maybe thats why they cost 6,000 like that ellis

  • @joepicker666
    @joepicker666 3 года назад +1

    I appreciate the differences in sound but have to question how influential the holes are in this brief study of two very different instruments.

  • @akoppen
    @akoppen 4 года назад +15

    The old one has more low, I prefer that one.

  • @andyquinn1125
    @andyquinn1125 2 года назад

    Nicely done. Being a guitar picker, I got no dog in this fight. But the old Mando has something the other does not. Both sound gorgeous. Are there any innovative Mando makers? A sound hole on the side of the upper bout on my new guitar has changed my guitar playing. Innovative Mando - Any?

  • @Mandolin1944
    @Mandolin1944 4 года назад +2

    Very nice job making this comparison -- many wonder about this difference and you've given a good general demonstration on the different tonal characteristics of oval versus f-hole mandolins. Of course two different mandolins might give a slightly different comparative picture -- but I believe that the overall effect will be similar. Oval-hole mandolins have sustain, "roundness", favor bass tones, and often give a sweet sound and with good sustain. OTOH, F-hole produce a sharper, brighter, typically more staccato sound with faster sound die off (less sustain) and often a more penetrating sound which is why bluegrass player like them for chopping? I wonder who the four morons who down thumbed this video are?

  • @erniemiller1953
    @erniemiller1953 4 года назад +1

    The difference I hear is f-hole is sharper. The o-hole is more sustained. The o-hole has a more guitar sound.

  • @congerscott6064
    @congerscott6064 4 года назад

    I think they both sound great, i would be proud to own either one 👍.

  • @qwargy
    @qwargy 3 года назад

    Oval holes always sound great at first but F holes have a lot of complexity in tones that can be extracted with good technique. Oval holes might be said to be a bit limited in tonal variety.

  • @lewisgeyer1440
    @lewisgeyer1440 4 года назад +1

    That Ellis is the most beautiful instrument ever made. Who cares how it sounds? ;-)

    • @Christian-my4dp
      @Christian-my4dp 4 года назад +1

      I honestly think that old Gibson is the best looking instrument

  • @julienielsen3746
    @julienielsen3746 4 года назад

    Like them both. Nice mandolins.

  • @lisamooney7026
    @lisamooney7026 4 года назад

    Your great, thanks for all the cool stuff I learn from you

  • @GalushkoPP
    @GalushkoPP 4 года назад +4

    Hi! Thanks for the video, very interesting to compare these two...
    By the way, does anybody know a good modern alternative to Gibson A style mandolins?

  • @stevencronin9434
    @stevencronin9434 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for this. I was wondering what the difference between f and oval mandos was, in my neck of the woods there are not a lot of music stores that stock either. Sounds to me like when I upgrade it will be time to go for an oval hole.

  • @MeneerHerculePoirot
    @MeneerHerculePoirot Год назад

    If playing with an acoustic miced group w/vocals, guitar, mando and string bass than I'd go with the f hole. The oval hole would go better with a solo vocalist as the sound is much more full. They both sound great, though.

  • @Heimrik01
    @Heimrik01 3 года назад +1

    The oval hole has a more ample and open sound and also lower.

  • @jerrymiddaugh4881
    @jerrymiddaugh4881 4 года назад

    Great comparison!

  • @johnjriggsarchery2457
    @johnjriggsarchery2457 2 года назад

    I have a 1922 A2 and it sounds like your Snakehead. The next question, even though we know that individual mandolins of the same ilk have their own voice is, do not truss rod paddle heads sound all that much different than truss rodded Gibson Snakeheads from the 20's?

  • @magmarok8209
    @magmarok8209 4 года назад +1

    I like the f-hole one better, it sounds more violin like, the O-hole would be better paired with an octave mandolin as it sounds more guitar like.

  • @BillCadmus
    @BillCadmus 4 года назад

    Wow, that Gibson really rings out!

  • @Dulcietta_LilliaClarke
    @Dulcietta_LilliaClarke 3 года назад

    I was able to listen and tell the change in instrument without looking up. I think the O one sounds more like my guitar, I like the different character of the F . The O was a more deadened sound, although it did have a rounder warm tone. I think it would very much depend on the style of music. For fiddle and bluegrass I think the F , and for ballads and laments the O . This does show the reason for having one of each , thanks ! My Question is does the F shaped mandolin differ in sound to the A shaped one ?

  • @luizion
    @luizion 4 года назад

    the vintage reminds me of the Brazilian mandolin that followed the influence of the Portuguese viola

  • @margaretblack8491
    @margaretblack8491 4 года назад

    Thanks. Very helpful and informative.

  • @eddiestephens5213
    @eddiestephens5213 4 года назад +2

    My ears are probably not that good but the f hole sounded more open to me and less nasal tone.

  • @StopFear
    @StopFear 3 года назад

    So, at least tell us where has this old mandolin was stored al these years, or who was using it? Somehow it survived without falling apart. Very interesting how it got into your hands.

  • @RVsbladesnthangs
    @RVsbladesnthangs Год назад

    Really cool

  • @stratocactus
    @stratocactus 4 года назад

    One important thing to consider is the top bracing. Do you know how their are braced ? X or A braces ? I think Ellis goes for the A brace pattern, and I think Gibson used both in that era.

  • @cindygoblirsch9438
    @cindygoblirsch9438 4 года назад

    Wonderful Information~ Thank you!

  • @Iceland874
    @Iceland874 2 года назад

    Wow the 1924 Gibson is wonderful.

  • @willemkossen
    @willemkossen 4 года назад +5

    What about the italian style mandolin ?

    • @Christian-my4dp
      @Christian-my4dp 4 года назад

      Do you mean the bowl mandolins?

    • @willemkossen
      @willemkossen 4 года назад

      @@Christian-my4dp i guess. i have one of those, that look like a small lute. its round or egg shaped at the back.

    • @Don-be5ci
      @Don-be5ci 4 года назад

      They are called potato bugs. Kinda inconvenient shape, on the other hand a flat backed instrument is somewhat muted by the back being muffled. And the bowl of the potato bug acts as a parabola, and focuses the sound out of the front.

  • @AlejandroParis
    @AlejandroParis 3 года назад

    0:02 happy new year..........

  • @Passion4Pitchforks
    @Passion4Pitchforks 4 года назад

    Terrific video!

  • @congerscott6064
    @congerscott6064 3 года назад

    Those are both nice, i would be happy to own either one 👍🇺🇸.

  • @oleksiishekhovtsov1564
    @oleksiishekhovtsov1564 4 года назад +1

    Gibson sounds a lot mellower and I wonder if it's capable of standing out in a band setting

  • @meepcheep314
    @meepcheep314 3 года назад

    I'd rather play the f hole styled because it looks so much better

  • @johnmitchelljr
    @johnmitchelljr 3 года назад

    Thanks for the video. The only fair comparison is the same model guitar one with f hole the other oval. The oval is richer but would the one sound better with an oval not f hole. Anyone do that direct kind of test. Thanks again.

  • @ShipWreck68
    @ShipWreck68 4 года назад +2

    I like them both. Looks like I have to open the wallet a little wider.

  • @NtaGot
    @NtaGot 4 года назад

    i have a flat handmaded mandolin and although the sound is good i think the wood is thicker than a normal mandolin and its doesnt sound loud enough compared to other mandolins. Is there any possibility to change the sound of the mandolin?

  • @jeannenoelchalfont2681
    @jeannenoelchalfont2681 4 года назад +2

    Thank you, you have confirmed that I need to buy an Oval to have w/ my F hole. Shouldn't it be F holes? 😁

  • @anubispup4760
    @anubispup4760 3 года назад +2

    I always found Oval Hole Mandolins to be great at playing celtic music.

  • @craighohm390
    @craighohm390 2 года назад

    Is the f hole maple and the gibson mahogany?

  • @mickthepope
    @mickthepope 4 года назад

    Just wondering if you may have purchased that Gibson from Music Folk in St. Louis ?

  • @jtwsince1968
    @jtwsince1968 2 года назад

    Cool. Like The Gibson best

  • @packetman1
    @packetman1 2 года назад

    The Gibson sounds more rooted in its predecesor insturment, the lute.

  • @gibby6904
    @gibby6904 4 года назад

    I really have wanted an oval or round hole Gibson for years......but I'm Still using my 90s Alvarez A100......laminated top so it never improves....just like my playing...lol....

  • @StopFear
    @StopFear 3 года назад

    Bowl back mandolins sound best IMO

  • @nvdawahyaify
    @nvdawahyaify 3 года назад

    In my opinion the oval hole sounds better for solo playing, and the f hole sounds better if it were played in a group with other instruments.

  • @jub8891
    @jub8891 3 года назад

    they both sound nice but i think the f-hole sounds ringy and bright

  • @patricelongchamps9880
    @patricelongchamps9880 4 года назад

    OMG Gibson has a such presence.

  • @acmullane
    @acmullane 4 года назад

    imo f hole is better for chords, but the round hole is better for melody. would have been even better with a cooker grill...

  • @ironrifle86
    @ironrifle86 4 года назад

    I was wondering if I wanted to make a request for how to play a song how would I go about that?

  • @chrisnmayor
    @chrisnmayor 4 года назад

    does anyone know the name of tune that was played at the end?

  • @benloyd1970
    @benloyd1970 4 года назад

    I liked the oval hole across the board.

  • @Rachels123
    @Rachels123 4 года назад

    The gibson by far!

  • @shineisle2263
    @shineisle2263 5 месяцев назад

    ස්තූතියි .🌹❤🇱🇰👍