Hi I am trying to see whether anyone may know who made my Australian Handmade Guitar.
I picked it up secondhand from a music store Derringers in Adelaide (where I live) around 10 years ago but they could not offer me any information on the maker and I cannot find a name anywhere on the guitar.
I am very keen to track down the luthier, I had one maker look at it and he thought that the back and neck were Tasmanian Blackwood and the top was King Billy Pine and sides New Guinea Rosewood. If you have any information on who the maker might be please let me know. Hopefully the headstock inlay will help.
Thankyou
Duncan
Australia Handmade Guitar - Trying to locate the Maker!!!
Re: Australia Handmade Guitar - Trying to locate the Maker!!
Have you checked on underside of top?...many luthiers place a signature and date here. Get a small mirror and poke it inside the soundhole and have a look.
Interesting guitar...has a classical style rosette.
Interesting guitar...has a classical style rosette.
Martin
Re: Australia Handmade Guitar - Trying to locate the Maker!!
No idea at all.
Re: Australia Handmade Guitar - Trying to locate the Maker!!
Nope, no idea.
As Marty said, most of us sign our names on the under side of the top. Kind of just how it's done. Have a squiz there should be some thing there.
As Marty said, most of us sign our names on the under side of the top. Kind of just how it's done. Have a squiz there should be some thing there.
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Re: Australia Handmade Guitar - Trying to locate the Maker!!
Sorry Duncan, no help here either.
You'd be surprised at just how many makers are closeted away in Australia - both serious/professional and hobby/amateur builders. I guess only a select minority actually get to be 'known' to any great degree and therefore recognisable by their work.
Those that are would certainly have a label and/or other identifying features on their guitar. This suggests to me then that your instrument has been built by a hobby builder, student or someone newer to the craft. Though perhaps not totally new given the level of inlay detail. The other indicators to the same effect are the unusual mixed timber usage you mention and as Martin eyed, the 'classical rosette' on a steel string instrument. Not criticising these details by the way, just commenting they would be rarer to find from a 'known name' builder unless it was a deliberate act such as "built from the renovated kitchen materials" etc.
Therefore really what you are hoping is that someone on here either built it or, happens to be mates with the guy/girl who made it. So far no luck. Someone had to have given it to the music store in the first place, so it is a bit strange they had no further info. That would have to have been your best lead to trace back through... Tricky now - ten years gone!
As a side, I see the headstock inlay as a Ginko Branch... Clue perhaps??
Best of luck.
Jeremy.
You'd be surprised at just how many makers are closeted away in Australia - both serious/professional and hobby/amateur builders. I guess only a select minority actually get to be 'known' to any great degree and therefore recognisable by their work.
Those that are would certainly have a label and/or other identifying features on their guitar. This suggests to me then that your instrument has been built by a hobby builder, student or someone newer to the craft. Though perhaps not totally new given the level of inlay detail. The other indicators to the same effect are the unusual mixed timber usage you mention and as Martin eyed, the 'classical rosette' on a steel string instrument. Not criticising these details by the way, just commenting they would be rarer to find from a 'known name' builder unless it was a deliberate act such as "built from the renovated kitchen materials" etc.
Therefore really what you are hoping is that someone on here either built it or, happens to be mates with the guy/girl who made it. So far no luck. Someone had to have given it to the music store in the first place, so it is a bit strange they had no further info. That would have to have been your best lead to trace back through... Tricky now - ten years gone!
As a side, I see the headstock inlay as a Ginko Branch... Clue perhaps??
Best of luck.
Jeremy.
Re: Australia Handmade Guitar - Trying to locate the Maker!!
Or a Scottish thistleJ.F. Custom wrote:
As a side, I see the headstock inlay as a Ginko Branch... Clue perhaps??
Jeremy.
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but you can't bomb the world to peace!
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