Goodness, I've just looked up the last post I made here and it's been half a year. Time to follow up. First things first... I actually managed to finish my very first instrument! Such a great feeling.
Life gets in the way of all your plans, but to make a long story short after a bout of family illness we all decided to bugger off on short notice from the miserable dampness of NZ winter and took a trip back to Europe for a couple of months. I was determined not to let the opportunity pass to personally hand-deliver a ukulele to my brother in Berlin so I made it my goal to finish one of them off before my journey. After a frantic rush and lots of help from local luthier and all-around-nice-guy Christian Druery I succeeded.
I managed to pack a uke hardcase into my conventional luggage so my brother had literally no idea until I opened my luggage in from of him and handed him the instrument. He was delighted.
I am so happy with the finished product, and it came out so much better than I imagined before I started. Of course there were plenty of problems along the way, but also plenty of solutions and loads of learning opportunities. I feel so much more confident after the 1st one that I can't wait to complete the second one (which is still in bits in my garage). With the glacial pace of my lutherie I may even get that done this century!
I have taken millions of construction pics, but most of them are probably boring to you old hands here, so I think I'll just follow up here with with a couple of pics of the finished instrument unless anybody is hugely interested in any particular area.
In my final rush I didn't get to set it up fully, so my brother will re-carve the nut and saddle when he has an opportunity, and we decided to switch out the tuning pegs for geared tuners (friction tuners are indeed horrible things). However, despite this and even in the state I delivered it in it played really nicely, sounded great, and was a million times beter than the cheap (and not quite so cheap) ones I had tried in shops before.
It is an immensely satisfying experience to hold a finished instrument in your hand that you built yourself. Imagine how good the next one could be now that you've accumulated all this knowledge, or the one after that, or...
