WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The violin and the art of its construction: a treatise on the Stradivarius violin cover

The violin and the art of its construction: a treatise on the Stradivarius violin

Chapter 17: XIII. THE FINGER-BOARD AND NUT.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The treatise offers practical, step-by-step guidance on making, repairing, and caring for violins, grounded in the author's decades of workshop experience and admiration for Stradivarius. It begins with selection and properties of woods, then proceeds through construction details—ribs, back, belly, arching, purfling, thicknessing, f-holes, bass-bar, neck, fingerboard, and dimensions—and continues with fittings such as pegs, bridge, tailpiece, sound-post, and strings. Final chapters address varnish, cleaning, maintenance, and bow construction, combining technical measurements with hands-on tips for professional makers and informed amateurs.

XIII. THE FINGER-BOARD AND NUT.

Both these portions of the instrument must be made of ebony (Fig. 12). Before the finger-board is glued, the surfaces to be joined must be made particularly smooth. The length is 268 m/m. in an instrument of normal size, and in those which are longer and shorter, the necessary proportion is easily determined. The width of the upper end, near the nut, is 24 m/m., while at the lower end it measures 45 m/m.

The curve at the nut should be the same as the curve of the bridge, the thickness being from 4 to 5 m/m. Whilst the centre of the finger-board should form a straight line lengthways, it must be hollowed out under the E-string equally to the depth of 1 m/m., and under the G-string to 1¹⁄₂ m/m., in order to prevent the jarring and rattling of the strings. The thickness of the nut must be 5 m/m. on the under side and 4 m/m. on the upper. The distance between the two outer string-grooves must be from 16 to 18 m/m. The strings lie at the nut (a) in the case of E, A, and D-strings at a distance of ¹⁄₂ m/m. from the finger-board, the G-string 1 m/m. The thickness of the neck, including the finger-board, is 18 m/m. at the upper curve (Fig. 8b I.) for a hand of ordinary size, and 24 m/m. at the lower curve (Fig. 8b II); but this thickness can be altered according to the wish of the performer.