Here are a few photos and another little time-lapse video during the process of bracing soundboards, gluing in linings and fitting everything in preparation to close the box.
Vinyl & Music Festival Vienna!
I'm excited to be one of the few musical instrument makers participating in the Vinyl & Music Festival this year in Vienna. The event also happens to host the Vienna International Gig Poster Show. It looks like it'll be a lot of fun and the organizers are super nice, so come say hello and check out some cool stuff!
Website: http://www.vinyl-music.at/
Vinyl & Music Fest Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/138969916834278/
Vienna International Gig Poster Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1826197334090756/
Bending Sides Time Lapse, Planing backs and New Rosettes
Here's a quick video of me bending a rosewood side. Below, are also a few photos from the last weeks of planing backs, sides and tops, and the newest rosettes for the coming guitars. One is a pretty straightforward Torres/Hauser inspired rosette and the other is kind of a cool simple rosette inspired by some of the older Viennese style guitars by Hauser Sr.
New Kevin Callahan Pieces
Just heard from Seattle guitarist and composer Kevin Callahan that he just set up a new publishing company. I encourage you to check it out. You can purchase some of his most recent compositions from the website in both PDF and print formats. Link below:
Making a Rosette
Getting back into the flow of things. Here are some photos through the process of making a rosette. Inspired by the Antonio de Torres FE09 owned by Miguel Llobet. It's become a classic design often used by Hauser and Velasquez. I've always been a fan of this motif, so I've done a number of different variations of my own often incorporating a little bit more color. This one includes Spanish cedar, walnut, padouk, ebony, rosewood, maple, cherry and dyed poplar.
First Guitar of the Year
Strung up the first guitar of the year yesterday and I'm very pleased with how it turned out. Big lively sound, an even response and nice loose singing trebles. All handmade rosette, purflings and bindings.
- Western red cedar top
- Indian rosewood back and sides
- Spanish cedar neck
- Ebony fingerboard
- 650mm scale length
- 52mm nut width
- Elevated fingerboard
- Alessi tuners with ebony buttons
New Review
Pretty happy about this review and photos from guitarist and designer Teppei Teranishi of the instrument that I made for him. Thanks!
"My dude @cadizguitars absolutely crushed it. I gave him a couple really loose ideas of what I wanted out of a classical guitar and let him take it from there. Spruce and walnut, perfectly understated with the tastiest details. Ridiculously beautiful craftsmanship. Magical sound. Every note sounds like a thousand unicorns singing in unison. Thank you Michael!!✨🦄🙌🙌🙌"
First Coats of Shellac on New Modern Concert Model
Put the first coats of shellac on a new cedar and rosewood Modern Concert model. Really dark and straight grained Indian rosewood. Hard to get a good picture of though. Elevated fingerboard. 20th fret. 52mm nut, 43mm string spacing at the nut and 58mm at the saddle. An ever-so slightly re-proportioned headstock shape. Very excited to get strings on this thing.
Custom Walnut Classic Concert Model
Finished up a new spruce and walnut Classic Concert Model today. This particular guitar was made custom for a friend of mine Teppei. On top of being a great guitarist for the band Thrice, he is also an super talented designer and leather worker. You can see his work at Teranishi Studio.
I was super excited when he asked me to make a guitar for him and also to get to try out some new ideas. I wanted to do something fairly traditional and elegant, but also very simple and understated based on what I know of his aesthetic and personality. This guitar is broadly based off of the Torres SE114. The arrows on the heel cap and ladder motif in the rosette are also inspired by Torres.
It has a loose, lively and romantic sound, but also a clear attack and a lot of presence. What I like about walnut is that it is somewhere in between rosewood and maple in terms of its density. It has an excitement and clarity that comes with a lighter wood, but not as much damping and dryness of maple in particular. It has a matte open-pore finished with is smooth and very light.
Two New Guitars
Strung up these two guitars about a week ago and I'm finally getting some time write a bit about them. At a quick glance, they both look quite similar aesthetically, but they are quite different both in design and sound.
The first is my newest Classic Concert Model. It is what I have previously been calling my Torres Model, but while that was the original inspiration, I feel that it has become more generalized and is now more accurately my own interpretation and best effort to emphasize what I like most about this style of guitar. I has a very colorful old-world sound. It has a lower body frequency, a loose bloom to each note, but with a clarity and attack that speaks out an projects. It has a nice resonance and complexity, but isn't too chaotic at the same time.
The second is a custom Modern Concert Model. It is as slightly larger body shape and braced quite differently. This guitar uses a bracing system inspired by a particular Barbero (hijo) guitar that I found particularly exciting, but modified the design a bit to reign in some of its raw enthusiasm. It has a slightly more robust and modern sound than my other model. It has a bigger dynamic range and a stiffer tension allowing the play to push it harder. It is a bit more homogenous across the strings and up and down the fretboard, but still very colorful and lively. It also features a sound-port and armrest. Tuners are made by Nicolo Alessi.