I Made a Brand New Guitar With a Vintage Tone

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Daisy Tempest

Daisy Tempest

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 667
@billsandrelli957
@billsandrelli957 Жыл бұрын
the tone quality of that guitar so so warm and soothing. I am new to your channel but I am now hooked.
@stnwrd
@stnwrd 2 жыл бұрын
Daisy a Huge Congratulations on being awarded Creator On The Rise!!!!!!
@DaisyTempest
@DaisyTempest 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@jamesdellaneve9005
@jamesdellaneve9005 2 жыл бұрын
I have a Gibson L-0 which was made in 1930. It was my Grandpa’s. The entire guitar is mahogany and like Daisy said is very hard and dried out. It sounds wonderful and plays like brand new. Recently, the bridge popped off. The glue dried out. I’ll be re-glueing it and give it another 90 years.
@BenState
@BenState Жыл бұрын
neck reset?
@jamesdellaneve9005
@jamesdellaneve9005 Жыл бұрын
@@BenState No. The neck is perfect after 100 years. The bridge was loose when I got it from my Grandmother back in the early 1970’s. I popped it off and used epoxy back then. Recently, the epoxy popped and I glued it back using the correct glue.
@BenState
@BenState Жыл бұрын
@@jamesdellaneve9005no guitar's neck is perfect after 100 years.
@jamesdellaneve9005
@jamesdellaneve9005 Жыл бұрын
@@BenState Well. I don’t know what to say. I’ve never had to even adjust the truss rod. And the top is slightly bowed (by design) which one would thinks would give you string height adjustment issues, but no. It’s setup perfectly and I’ve never adjusted it. The fretboard is perfectly straight. No buzzing, etc. It’s really quite striking. It doesn’t even need to be altered due to the weather. It’s all mahogany, even the top. BTW, I’ve made two short scale electric basses from scratch. I know how to build and setup instruments. My basses move a little with weather and seasons.
@saelaird
@saelaird Жыл бұрын
Take it to a pro.
@murraywagnon1841
@murraywagnon1841 2 жыл бұрын
That guitar has some beautiful tone!!! Strong, warm bass, and bold trebles.
@kznsq77
@kznsq77 Жыл бұрын
I'm using your videos for English listening learning because it is so nice seeing your personality, seeing your work, and listening to your British pronunciation :)
@thseed7
@thseed7 2 жыл бұрын
I have a 1973 Guild Acoustic that has always had, over 30 years of owning it, something special about it tonally and feel-wise. I have no way to describe, explain or quantify it outside of everyone who hears or plays it agrees. It has been old to me since I got it as a kid in '96. But every other acoustic I've ever played has never quite lived up to the magic this old, budget guitar possesses.
@dickwestheimer
@dickwestheimer 2 жыл бұрын
I have a ‘72 D-35 guild I bought in ‘74. It’s not my finest guitar but it is my favorite.
@williamormerod486
@williamormerod486 2 жыл бұрын
sometimes the stars align on a guitar no matter what the price point. also if you learned on that guitar you in the learning process learned how to wrangle the best sounds out of it as you went along and those skills don't necessarily transfer to the next guitar. I pleased for you that you have one that fills you with joy and those who hear it too. the woods have to match each other and the player. so many variables it's a wonder that anyone gets a dreamboat guitar but it happens thankfully.
@HWCism
@HWCism Жыл бұрын
A friend gave me his fathers Martin guitar. A 1930 model made of Hawaiian wood with rolled silk and steel strings. Martin let the wood age over a 25 year period before making a guitar. The sound was incredible to say the least. That is some project you took on. Great work,thanks
@J.C...
@J.C... Жыл бұрын
Yea, no. That's not true. People will also tell you the reason pre-war Martin's sound great is that they used all the wood that had been sitting on the factory floor for the last 100 years because of the war. That's nonsense too. They do have a torrefication process they use to artificially age the wood though.
@davidpelham4861
@davidpelham4861 2 жыл бұрын
I have some redwood tops cut from "barn found" logs with cutting records showing the trees were felled over 100 years ago. I have built classical guitars with this wood and love the sound! Straight, tight grain and being quarter sawn, of course, adds to the tone, also.
@Case_
@Case_ Жыл бұрын
I have no idea if it sound vintage or not since I have no real frame of reference for what "vintage sound" means, especially when it comes to acoustic guitars, but the guitar certainly sounds lovely, regardless of (supposed) recording imperfections, very full and balanced sound, just how acoustic guitar should sound IMO. I can imagine it plays just as nice, too.
@PeterKaitlyn
@PeterKaitlyn 7 ай бұрын
It has a beautiful warm sound, with a deep resonance on the bass side that I love...
@hallofrecords4959
@hallofrecords4959 Жыл бұрын
Very lovely. The work, the playing, everything.
@quaich14
@quaich14 2 жыл бұрын
Living your infectious enthusiasm and your incredible skill. Kudos
@JeffLynnGuitar
@JeffLynnGuitar 2 жыл бұрын
That to me is how every acoustic guitar should sound. Full bodied with note clarity.
@trout3685
@trout3685 2 жыл бұрын
i like no sound no clarity
@mulekickhandmadeguitars8465
@mulekickhandmadeguitars8465 Жыл бұрын
Hello Daisey, Mike from Mule Kick Guitars USA. Thought I'd share this with you. Several years ago I was able to purchase, from a timber reclaiming company, several board feet of Yellow Birch that had been retrieved from the bottom of Lake Superior that had been down there perfectly preserved since the middle 1800's. I've built quite a few guitar necks with this unique wood and it has a stunningly gorgeous look and tone, like nothing else I've ever seen.
@thejonathandoan
@thejonathandoan 2 жыл бұрын
Your playing was absolutely gorgeous! Beautiful guitar as well. Thanks for the video!!
@IainHC1
@IainHC1 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely love the sound!! Warm and clear 🙂Awesome guitar 🙂
@rakentrail
@rakentrail 10 ай бұрын
Back in the late 1970's (yes I'm that old) I worked for a short time for a small local luthier in Southern New England (USA) and it was his belief that if you completely dry out your woods and then reacclimate them to normal conditions they have a far superior tone. He built a "drying cabinet" that kept the wood at 125 deg F. It also had a large pan in the bottom he kept full of calcium chloride pellets. CC is a desiccant that never stops absorbing moisture. He stored his woods for pending projects in there for months! Then they'd sit on a shelf in the shop for a month or two before building began. Was it better? Who knows! I once had a red spruce "master grade" top set that was dead as a stone. Looked pretty but had no ring at all! Keep at it and stay true to the craft. You'll make it!
@HarryNicNicholas
@HarryNicNicholas 6 ай бұрын
i've found the problem is no two guitars, even from the same wood stock, sound the same. i bought a martin OOOX1 back in 2016 and i actually think it's the best sounding acoustic guitar in the world, the bass really growls at you and the trebles have that martin bell ring to them, and the resonance goes right through your body when you play, new strings are mind blowing on it. the X series are spruce top and "HPL" back and sides, i think (nowhere does anyone say specifically) that HPL is just compressed and glued mahogany dust, high pressure laminate, so essentially it's a man made material and one would think consistent across all builds. i bought ANOTHER OOOX1 to compare though, the guitar is that good. the differences were: martin No1 was made in the USA in 2004, and martin No2 was made in mexico is 2014, and apart from the top finish (they seal it, but there is no lacquer, this is a budget guitar) and a 1mm difference in the break angle at the bridge, they should be identical - they weren't - (i do a couple of comparisons on my channel) so i was surprised just how different two martin OOOX1's could be, completely different beats, and that's a man made material too. i also have a 66 J45 (i bought in the 70's, i'm that old too) and a 69 epi texan - two very similar guitars that also sound entirely different to each other. you can't win with wood.
@PG-ex3kl
@PG-ex3kl 2 жыл бұрын
Your playing is beautiful. It’s not about being good, it’s about how it makes you feel. I build electric guitars and am not a great player , it’s not our job. It’s up to the people buying the instrument to make the music. I baked a pine strat body in the oven and it is super light and resonant and the smell created in the house was somewhere between baked bread and old socks. Thank you for the video
@sam-lynch
@sam-lynch 2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are wonderful, and you are a pleasure to watch go about your passion. Congratulations on being ‘new up and comer’ Daisy! I look forward to seeing your journey onwards.
@philwild5279
@philwild5279 2 жыл бұрын
I don't know enough about accoustic guitars to know what 'vintage' should sound like, but I can hear that the guitar you built sounds great and that's enough for me :) You play far better than you give yourself credit for.
@johnsmithers389
@johnsmithers389 2 жыл бұрын
The guitar sounds great Daisy, and looks good. Job very well done I say.
@DaisyTempest
@DaisyTempest 2 жыл бұрын
So glad you like it!
@stevesstrings5243
@stevesstrings5243 2 жыл бұрын
How about this? Salvage the sound board from an old piano! Congratulations on your continued growth! I love watching your videos! Keep them coming!
@blodpudding
@blodpudding 2 жыл бұрын
There are actually piano makers who uses shell/cabinet(?) from old pianos and add all new keys and the parts inside and they are supposed to sound great.
@stevesstrings5243
@stevesstrings5243 2 жыл бұрын
@@blodpudding I have seen luthiers who used 100+ year old piano sound boards for guitar builds. I recently acquired a piece for an ukulele build.
@Flea-Flicker
@Flea-Flicker 2 жыл бұрын
Piano soundboards have a slight concave or convex shape depending on which side you look at it, but you might get a piece flat enough to do something.
@stevesstrings5243
@stevesstrings5243 2 жыл бұрын
@@Flea-Flicker The piece I got was thick enough to re-saw. Once thickness sanded, it should work fine.
@gwbuilder5779
@gwbuilder5779 2 жыл бұрын
@Steve's Strings Using sound board wood is a great idea, especially for ukuleles. You definitely have enough size for resawing. I have a 1904 Chickering & Son's baby grand that I am rebuilding. There are several different species of wood used depending upon the builder and era, so variable materials are definitely an option. Many times the sound board will crack providing the perfect opportunity for someone naturally aged tone wood.🤙
@patrickcollins6830
@patrickcollins6830 7 ай бұрын
Really nice sustain, clarity, note-to-note balance, and trebles that project without being too strident. Allowing the shapes and materials to create beauty without going for added decoration creates a really lovely result. That guitar speaks for itself. What fine work!
@chrism6952
@chrism6952 2 жыл бұрын
Congratulations on being awarded Creator On The Rise. Ive really been enjoying this content and the way you present it.
@dalepeterson7124
@dalepeterson7124 2 жыл бұрын
I'd like to hear the guitar both before and after the wood going through torrification. It would certainly help tip the scales on the marketing/better tone debate.
@wilhelmtheconquerer6214
@wilhelmtheconquerer6214 Жыл бұрын
Torrefied wood is definitely one of the key ingredients in recreating a vintage instrument. Other important aspects are to use dyes and lacquers that react to UV light, (nitrocellulose is an obvious contender), as well as rolling the fretboard edges for a more "played-in" feel
@michael4930
@michael4930 2 ай бұрын
Love, love, love the tone of that guitar. Right up my alley as a finger-stylist. Warm, mellow tone without the shrill highs that pierce the ears. Great work.
@ParaBellum2024
@ParaBellum2024 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent use of the thumbnail! And the guitar does sound very balanced. On a separate note, I have one of those white Axminster bandsaws and although it looks ok, the frame has so little rigidity that the table can be moved/wobbled with one finger. Thankfully it was a cheap eBay purchase so I'm not too far out of pocket.
@andrewwasson6153
@andrewwasson6153 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. I didn’t know what to expect with the disclaimers about microphone placement, etc. but it really sounds nice. I’m sure your client will be over the moon when they finally take possession.
@michaelsablan8772
@michaelsablan8772 2 жыл бұрын
Aloha Daisy! I enjoy your back story, your journey that led you to where you are now….great work on your Luthier skills! Some months ago, I was at Guitar Center here in Hawaii and checking out guitars in the used section(my normal routine) and I picked up a Yamaha classical and a Fender acoustic. I strummed the Yamaha first and my reaction was “Wow!” I put it down and picked up the Fender Malibu and strummed it and went “WHOAH!” Amazing sound out of both, the volume was loud, good resonance and vibration that you can feel in the body, through the neck and very light. I went by sight(the tags were flipped behind the neck so I couldn’t read what I was grabbing. What attracted me to these two guitars was the very yellowish or amber colored tops, both are spruce I believe. I was attracted to the Fender because the headstock was shaped like a Strat. I finally looked at the tags and the Yamaha was from 1971 and the Fender was a ‘65. I always read about guitarists picking up a certain guitar and a voice within them saying this is it….this is the one! I purchased the Fender right away and thought hard about the Yamaha, even harder on the way home. I told myself I’ll go back tomorrow and get it but it was gone the next day….huge regret! The Manager(good friends with him) came out from the back and I said did you hear this thing? how about this one as well? He did not get to try them but he told me what I already figured out….”it’s the wood Mike, it is so old and dried out nicely by now that it is prime for resonance!” What was really funny was that the bridge saddle on the Fender was so short and thin for the slot that it was leaning badly….wrong size replacement! The three employees (they all know me and are good friends) at the checkout counter tried it and were blown away at how great it sounded! OK….the vintage sound? Well, on these two vintage guitars, they sounded great! They definitely stood out from the rest in resonance in comparison to the newer, modern ones. I have actually read some tags on other guitars in the past before picking them up and some were old….maybe late ‘70s-80s but they did not stand out from the newer models. Sometimes it is hit or miss. I am so sorry that this is so long winded. Mahalo nui loa for sharing your time. Keep up with your outstanding work Daisy….Aloha nui
@offbeatbassgear
@offbeatbassgear 2 жыл бұрын
Torrified wood is also seeing some use in electric instruments as well, more for stability than for there being any more resonance imparted to the wood. In the case of Yamaha, the Billy Sheehan Signature series bass uses torrified wood, though the bonus is stability versus tone, since pickups make the tone.
@blodpudding
@blodpudding 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who love the vintage sound and feeling and would love to find a way to recreate it with sustainable woods torrefaction is a really interesting topic. By roasting the wood you cause a maillard reaction, that's the same thing that happens to food when you brown it and it becomes so much more delicious, so if anything it would taste better 😋
@midnighttutor
@midnighttutor 2 жыл бұрын
Could be a feast if only humans could digest cellulose!
@DaisyTempest
@DaisyTempest 2 жыл бұрын
It really smells like baked cakes/biscuits when it comes out the oven!
@thebeast88_
@thebeast88_ 2 жыл бұрын
Sometimes they char the oak used for whiskey barrels to give it a different flavor
@calebbhawkins
@calebbhawkins 2 жыл бұрын
A few years ago I was in Chicago Music Exchange and playing every Gibson J45 they had. What I found was the vintage ones did have a lot more resonance and sustain than the new ones, and the ones that were around 20 years old but had the exact same specs, finish, tuners etc had an obvious advantage over a brand new one tonally. There is something about a n acoustic guitar that has had vibration through the wood. That being said Torrified wood splits the difference and devices like the Tonerite seem to help players get there a bit quicker also. I just got my second guitar with Torrified wood, the first one showed up and didn’t sound bad out of the box… 48 hours later I could hear it changing… It changed a LOT in just a year and all I’ve done is play it. My second one I bought used so it already feels a little broken in, but I still thing there’s more it can do still. One thing I’ve learned is that baked spruce tops hardly ever go out of tune!
@JaredLeesBass
@JaredLeesBass Жыл бұрын
Beautiful sounding and looking instrument! The high notes have a nice, sweet fullness to them that I really like. Great work!
@dirtpilot5064
@dirtpilot5064 Жыл бұрын
I have a Gibson acoustic made in the late 60's and your guitar sounds surprisingly like mine. Yours is really beautiful. Well done!
@seanbaines
@seanbaines 2 жыл бұрын
I REALLY like this channel. Great geeky combo for me, because I'm primarily a player, but I'm also keenly interested in how guitars are made and how they work and what goes on in workshops. I'm a sometime basic woodworker/leather worker/metal worker who has also been a golf club repair/building tech, so "shoppy" things really interest me. I also think your personality and on camera presence/aura is absolutely terrific. You run a wonderful channel here, and I wish you every success.
@FXJunky
@FXJunky 2 жыл бұрын
Loving this channel. I’m taking guitar building courses at a local college through my job and in between classes (they are months apart) this has been scratching the itch. Cheers and best of luck as you keep building
@Andreas_Straub
@Andreas_Straub Жыл бұрын
Amazing sound. Like it very much!
@SB-kw6oo
@SB-kw6oo 2 жыл бұрын
Happy i came across your channel, beautiful work, warm and detailed sounding guitar, I love the vintage atlas inlay ❤️
@golflre7179
@golflre7179 2 жыл бұрын
Very warm sounding and rings out great. You should be very proud - you have created a work of art for someone else to enjoy.
@dennyclosser8456
@dennyclosser8456 2 жыл бұрын
Well done! I’ve been playing guitar acoustic and electric‘s for almost 50 years now. And I can definitely say an aged instrument that was played often and deeply, definitely sounds should I say sweeter especially in the mid range, the voicing More articulate and an aged instrument. Nowhere near as sharp, especially in acoustic instruments. But I can also tell of the extended sustain and melodic qualities of my electric’s that are older. It’s a joy to see a young girl such as yourself becoming a luthier! Much success and happiness to you. Carry-on I’ll be looking for more
@malmalamie2732
@malmalamie2732 2 жыл бұрын
Really lovely sounding instrument, with it’s own identity. I’m starting to think it’s not so much the wood used, but what the luthier does with it. Taylor have just released guitars made from ironbark ? That sound incredible. Awesome content, interesting informative and engaging. You’d make a great teacher. Peace and love from London.
@DaisyTempest
@DaisyTempest 2 жыл бұрын
This is such a lovely comment, thank you! Cheers from across London too!
@edt.5118
@edt.5118 2 жыл бұрын
Ironbark is eucalyptus wood.
@malmalamie2732
@malmalamie2732 2 жыл бұрын
@@edt.5118 Thanks for the info. Iron bark , sounds like a character from game of Thrones .
@chriscmoor
@chriscmoor Жыл бұрын
wow... I just happened across your channel... and ... wow... I'm just impressed, overwhelmed and speechless. Thank you.
@stanislavmigra
@stanislavmigra 2 жыл бұрын
For me "vintage" sound means something like, very well played in. Like there are all the requencies of the instrument, but not "harsh spikes" nor "flubiness". Like there is plenty of treble content, but its not unpleasant earpiercing treble etc. From my experience, the more guitar is played, the better it sounds. So old instrument, that was well loved and played a lot has better sound then new instrument. This is for me, what can be labeled as vintage sound. PS: that guitar sounded and looked really good. What a great sound.
@spencerarnold669
@spencerarnold669 2 жыл бұрын
I've used the tonerite and had some great results maturing the soud (also a few less so). Its a gadget which vibrates the guitar and simulate years of playing.
@frankmormon2503
@frankmormon2503 Жыл бұрын
Love your content! An easy thing to try if your chasing vintage acoustic tone is the strings. I gave Martin retro lights on a 000 12 Mh - a game changer for that guitar. I always liked the tone but with the monel steel strings- for me , it’s perfect .
@douglasaxtell
@douglasaxtell Жыл бұрын
I built a few thinline guitars (yeah electric) with American chestnut harvested from barn timbers circa 1815 (old growth). The chestnut is the cap and the body is ash I feld about 15 yrs ago and stored as timbers in barns. They are very light and resonant. 4.5 to 5.5 lbs (8-10kg) each and sound great. The necks are maple and maple/rosewood. The maple had been stored more than 20 years before the second cuts. All the wood was off the bottom of the scale on my moisture meter. Your videos are awesome!
@DougMen1
@DougMen1 Жыл бұрын
I think you really have achieved what I consider "vintage" tone, because that guitar has a very full warm rich sound that also has very crisp and articulate treble tones that are always sweet and never too thin, brilliant, or shrill, very much like a vintage Martin. Also, 12 fret guitars always sound the best compared to 14 fret ones. The change in where the bridge is located allows the top to vibrate more freely and just results in a fuller richer tone.
@jamescopeland5358
@jamescopeland5358 2 жыл бұрын
I always enjoy your enthusiasm guitar making. You are actually inspiring me to build one. I have wondered what yellow pine would sound like and I have plenty.
@hop-skipthechewtoys1836
@hop-skipthechewtoys1836 2 жыл бұрын
The tone makes me want to cry, that's *gorgeous*
@takeawaybenji
@takeawaybenji 2 жыл бұрын
There is a well developed process to recreate the aged woods used in "stradivarius" violins. I wonder if thus would have any application in luthiery. Also, the Ken Parker Archtoppery channel has a lot to say about the composition of the back or the guitar for the resonance. Should the Torrefaction be done on the wood on the back? The bracing?
@matthewridgeway9250
@matthewridgeway9250 Жыл бұрын
Built with inspiration from vintage guitars. Done. Love to see a Selmer Maccaferrie "Petite Bouche" like the Reinhardt one made by you one day. That would be cracking! Thank you for your videos.
@domdimensions9219
@domdimensions9219 Жыл бұрын
sounds interesting. never heard of heating or baking the wood for this effect. One thing that I have heard of for improving the tone of a guitar is called a "tonerite". it works off of the idea of what you mentioned before. how the more the guitar vibrates the better the wood sounds (holds true I it seems for solid wood instruments. I think defiantly is not much of a factor for laminated wood instruments) it is a device that vibrates the top of the guitar at a very high rate and you leave it like that for a long time. for weeks. so its a bit of a slow process.
@michaelbarrett2855
@michaelbarrett2855 2 жыл бұрын
You Tube audio quality aside, I believe the guitar you made sounds like you! More exact is, part of your soul is now part of the guitar. That cannot ever be achieved in a factory setting. Vintage tone you say! You nailed it. Time and hours of playing the instrument creates real vintage tone. Nothing else does I believe. I have heard new guitars that are heavenly, even factory made. Attention to detail and minimizing any errors during construction will yield a playable instrument. And harmonics overtones are the wonderous results of of a grand instruments. It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing. Cheers
@Ziraffe2
@Ziraffe2 2 ай бұрын
Sounds very good - and as we know will only sound even better as it opens up and learns to relax. You are on the path to some great adventure, , , and btw. , , , that end-G rang fine too. . . Hi from Copenhagen
@WhiteRaven___
@WhiteRaven___ Жыл бұрын
"Vincent" is one of my favorite songs to play and you did a really nice demo of it on that guitar. The sound is overall very nice as well
@chrisgreenwood4713
@chrisgreenwood4713 2 жыл бұрын
There is no better, only different. Congrats on your award!
@jackhoss228
@jackhoss228 16 күн бұрын
this instrument has a perfect palette for Renaissance music Dowland especially. I have enjoyed many vintage hand made guitars from the 1920s onward through my association with California luthier Dexter Johnson, the last of the collectors of Brazilian Rosewood(air dried for years before building).Also a well known dealer in vintage and modern hand crafted guitars. I think this one will be stunning if it's played well for a year or two.You have done a brilliant job!
@mpasistasyalanci
@mpasistasyalanci 2 ай бұрын
Using an old piece of wood that was used for years on an other purpose is nice, I ve heard in Crete in Greece that luthiers were using the upper column from door frames from old village houses. A strong piece of wood with years of use and being under pressure. I heard they make Cretan lyras with it
@deangarner4
@deangarner4 Жыл бұрын
I had an old friend. long passed, that had a Takamine and he played that with Led Zeppelin, Manfred Man, the yard birds and many more over a glorified career. I had the honour of playing that instrument on stage. I searched many guitars trying to find something comparable for its warmth and tone. I tried many new Takamine's but nothing close. Closest I got was a Yamaha would you believe. It's electronics really help but... what you say is obviously true! The way crystalisation takes place and the time it takes to achieve. The players story is "baked" into the wood. You've done the only other conceivable thing and it sounds fantastic! Yes, the trebles especially! Amazing. Just, thank you.
@gsbguitarsgsb679
@gsbguitarsgsb679 2 жыл бұрын
Your playing is beautifully done! The guitar is awesome sounding, imo… 🎸🤓🎸❤️🌹
@DVSNTHERE
@DVSNTHERE 10 ай бұрын
I really dig it! I loved the tonal quality across the board. Bravo!!!
@TheDude1764
@TheDude1764 Жыл бұрын
You are a delight to watch. Just found your channel and am enjoying watching you work.
@chrisk3754
@chrisk3754 2 жыл бұрын
What you played sounded great. Tone and the playing where really nice. Congrats on the award and really good for you. I really like the teaching part mixed with nice humour. Thx!
@rickrickard2788
@rickrickard2788 2 жыл бұрын
I was not expecting to hear THAT sound. I've never seen this channel before- but that guitar has the same feel to it's sound, as a vintage Martin. I was truly surprised at the tone you elicited from it- and as far as your playing? Yeah- just fine. Strings buzz- happens.... But the want that guitar sounded when you were playing? I'd expect many more orders, for guitars just like that. I would SO love to hear that through my old Roland J-55 amp... damn. Excellent job.
@robertr4193
@robertr4193 2 жыл бұрын
It does sound lovely. Looks very nice as well.
@richardl9086
@richardl9086 2 жыл бұрын
Love the guitar. It is beautiful and I would love to own it. The vintage sound to me, or what I believe, is in the development of complex overtones which develop as the wood ages.
@the_nondrive_side
@the_nondrive_side 2 жыл бұрын
Cedar archtop. Use an ebony fingerboard and bridge and a tail piece. i guess flatwounds as well.. never think about it much
@MACLADILLY
@MACLADILLY 8 ай бұрын
That's a lovely sounding guitar! I made a Mandola, using vintage piano soundboard , lovely quarter sawn spruce. I think it's a bit mellower sounding than a new wood Mandola.
@darkiee69
@darkiee69 2 жыл бұрын
To vibrate the wood you can get an aquarium air pump and put it on the lid after the guitar is built. Move it around every now and then. Let it do its thing 14 days to a month and it'll sound more "played in". And in my opinion that guitar wouldn't look as great with a high gloss finish, it's beautiful in matt, it fits the tone too.
@1974UTuber
@1974UTuber 2 жыл бұрын
Nothing wrong with your playing. That was beautiful and I could listen to your playing for hours
@davidneath8194
@davidneath8194 11 ай бұрын
Sounds absolutely beautiful! Congratulations with your award!
@mrphil2557
@mrphil2557 2 жыл бұрын
Vibrating oven. Simple. Actually, some very good luthiers would say torrefication is like using faux leather, or laboratory made pearls - maybe pre-worn blue jeans (Collings is one - they achieve "vintage tone" by construction method). Others say it simply speeds up natural processes (Bourgeois is one). Bottom line, you've managed to create a beautiful sounding instrument that any player should be thrilled to own. But I love that you're constantly questioning, experimenting, and learning. Mastering a craft, like life, is a process - one that hopefully continues for as long as you continue to breathe. Good work, Daisy.
@timpanda3780
@timpanda3780 Жыл бұрын
I’m no expert at all re guitars but for me this guitar sounds very mellow and I loved it.
@zdenkotudor
@zdenkotudor 2 жыл бұрын
Daisy! I love the natural chill vibe of your videos! Would you tell us what your filming setup is? Phone? Camera? Though I would'nt be surprised if it too is a skill in the making - your videography that is!
@donaldholman9070
@donaldholman9070 2 жыл бұрын
wow..such a beautiful sound! Well done. great bass and clear highs the middle range has a real presence. there is no perfect formula. i think it is a great adventure to try to find what you love. if a client likes your sound and the look of your instruments they will come. i do not think they will have to be chased down. that is so boring.
@BB-ru6xs
@BB-ru6xs 2 жыл бұрын
I can’t describe a “vintage” tone either, but I did have a local luthier here in Minneapolis build me a GREAT guitar using a torrified spruce top. The back and sides are cocobolo, and it is not only a work of art, but a great sounding guitar. And it looks like you did a bang up job on that guitar. You play it very well too. For my money, there is no such thing as entry level music-every player just needs to play music that sounds good to them. And nice touch using atlas pages for that rosette!
@SymetryofOne
@SymetryofOne 2 жыл бұрын
Hi, really enjoyed the video. I find the whole topic of wood and tone really interesting. Can I ask where you get your timber for guitars. Do you simply find reclaimed wood or can you recommend a certain supplier? Thanks in advance
@erskinelewis6365
@erskinelewis6365 2 жыл бұрын
I believe there is a vintage sound for all the reasons you stated in the video. On my first trip to the Martin factory, I booked to play some 1940s, 1960s, 1980s and current Standard Series 000 and OM guitars in the museum. They all displayed the classic Martin sound but the older guitars were more dynamic, warm and resonant.
@f4nT49u1T4r88
@f4nT49u1T4r88 2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are always so fascinating. Congratulations on the growth of your channel! 🎉❤
@johnwylde8232
@johnwylde8232 2 жыл бұрын
I’m not an acoustic player as never found one that suits me however I have owned and played numerous vintage Fender and Gibson electric guitars. The idea of the vintage sound applies to acoustic and electric. I believe that it’s the dry quality that comes through in the tonality. Warmer and richer. The wood has aged and as you say altered in its dynamics. You can feel the instrument vibrate differently again your body allowing a closer Union. The guitar you’ve made and played sounds great and I have to say as a none acoustic player makes me rethink my position. Keep on with the videos and building. Love to watch the videos.
@johnhale6079
@johnhale6079 Жыл бұрын
I have a luthier friend who repairs mainly though builds too I have played early Gibson and Martin guitars and yours sounds great
@rocknroller912
@rocknroller912 2 жыл бұрын
Have you looked at treating the wood with polyethylene glycol PEG as used by wood turners to work with green timber. It drives the moisture out at cell level.
@eliot65446
@eliot65446 2 жыл бұрын
Do what you do Daisey. All of your content is great. I often rewatch videos.
@aaroncurtis8545
@aaroncurtis8545 2 жыл бұрын
That's the most beautiful guitar I've ever seen! And the inlay idea is wonderful. I'm sure your client is quite impressed with your work. I know I am.
@DaisyTempest
@DaisyTempest 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for the lovely comment Aaron!
@richardsweet5068
@richardsweet5068 2 жыл бұрын
As a side question to vintage sounding wood. How is the the wood you normally used seasoned. Years ago they spoke of 7 year seasoning, now I guess it is all artificially done. I have a quantity of timber purchased in the 1990s for clock cases including a very nicely figured piece of mahogany. It has been laying on a ventilated steel shelf ever since along with oak and maple, so it has not been lonely. It is presumably about as stable as it is going to get. Do you get problems with the wood you buy now or does a reliable supplier solve that problem.
@LPCustom3
@LPCustom3 2 жыл бұрын
I have a Custom Shop Gibson Les Paul Jr. that was made with Torrified wood in 2017. The sound is very close to a vintage Gibson L.P. Jr. & a 1963 Gibson J-50 that sounds wonderful!
@elektrolyte
@elektrolyte 2 жыл бұрын
Well done Creator On The Rise!!! I am not surprised. Excellent content and lots of open discussion. Makes me actually feel included. Keep 'em coming
@andrewhall1693
@andrewhall1693 Жыл бұрын
Hi Daisy I stumbled upon your work as youtube knows i follow woodturning and acoustic guitar .....so when I heard "torrefied" it was a new word to me .....and your explanation, good as it was left me with more questions ....how did you do it ? did you have a vacuum oven or did you use an inert gas atmosphere ? how long did it take? was it a one time thing or did it require heat cycles? please tell me more .....oh and I like your work so much so that I've been watching your other videos .....thanks for sharing with me and giving a glimpse of your work.
@TheRyanjMain
@TheRyanjMain 2 жыл бұрын
I have an old 12 string guitar from the 60s and I can feel it in my chest when I play, it's also a jumbo so it's massive, and sounds it. The finish is probably nitro? Or different to anything I have ever owned and warm and feels like wood more then plastic like my newer guitar. It might sound different. but it is easy to forget it's there and just play. Even with a jumbo body and thick neck :)
@bassnsax
@bassnsax 2 жыл бұрын
That guitar sounds FANTASTIC! To my (non-guitarist, non-acoustic guitarist) ear, it certainly leans to the more vintage-y sound. The treble response is gorgeous - as others have said, it's punchy, while being warm and slightly mellow, and not crispy or crunchy (oh no, slipping into food metaphors!). The mids and bass responses are lush! I'm not sure if it is "just marketing", but one of the things said about torrefied woods (or roasted, as we say here across the pond) is that it is supposed to be more stable in different climates. Where I live, we frequently will have summer days where it will be 90 degrees F (32.2 C) with 100% humidity, and then frequently we'll have winters where it is -20 degrees F (-28.9 C; even colder with the windchill. We experienced a Polar Vortex several years ago, where with the windchill, it was -52 F / -46.7 C.). I have one bass guitar that has a roasted/torrefied maple neck that I had bought about 4 years ago, and I'm not sure I notice a difference (but take that with a grain of salt, it is a more affordable instrument.). That said, the neck is a bit lighter, and quite resonant. But above all, I LOVE the look of torrefied/roasted woods - F Bass out of Canada offers a torrefied ash body as an option, which would look great with a transparent finish, just like the guitar you featured in this video! Congrats on the Creator On The Rise! Keep on rising!
@Stickytacos666
@Stickytacos666 Жыл бұрын
If you design the headstock to keep the tuning pegs aligned with the grooves on the bridge, it helps the guitar stay in tune better.
@FromTheNard
@FromTheNard 2 жыл бұрын
How exactly did you treat the wood? How was it heated w/out O2 present? How did you prevent cracks, warp etc? Great channel, really like seeing old style craftsmanship. Your guitars are works of art!
@Don-ih4st
@Don-ih4st 7 ай бұрын
FINALLY watched this whole video! Congrats on the COTR. Don't worry about your playing....I wish I could fingerpick as well as you.
@alheeley
@alheeley 2 жыл бұрын
bake it. 180C for 35 mins till nicely toasted. Add oven chips and caramalised onions. Superb!
@extrasmack
@extrasmack 2 жыл бұрын
Daisy, you little alchemist, you just opened up a very exciting topic! You actually torrified your own wood in a household oven?? PLEASE do a video showing and explaining the process and how you accomplish the task! Many of us would be extremely interested. Up till hearing you say you baked your own, I was under the assumption that torrification required specialized ovens and equipment not available to the hobbyist. Maybe that's where the dividing line lies between marketing hype and truth, how difficult or involved a process it actually is. As far as tone goes I definitely hear a clear distinction, with torrified woods coming about as close to the aged sounds as possible in lieu of actually reusing wood from aged instruments. Now if one could find a way of stressing and vibrating a piece of wood to a variety of frequencies during the torrification process I truly suspect the results would be just shy of magic! Lovely sounding instrument and nice demo despite the many obstacles involved with capturing sound on digital media. I'm sure your client will be well pleased. Hope it's sooner rather than later. Sounds like this has been a thorn in your side for literal ages. Finally, we are all definitely interested in hearing the differences in your newer instruments compared side by side. Thanks for making this art more accessible to all of us! Cheers!!!
@scottturcotte1860
@scottturcotte1860 2 жыл бұрын
Does torrified wood bend differently or with more difficulty compared with the wood you would normally use? Like the sides on the body for example... I suppose torrified wood could be one addition of many different processes that I have heard of being used to bring out tone in wood... "pond" dried, and I have heard a theory that somebody thinks Stratevarius "pickled" his woods for his violins... but it kind of sounds like these other processes are more about extracting the wood resins, and definitely much slower... almost makes you wonder what type of sound a combination of processes for extracting the resins and crystallize what is left behind may yield for tone... laugh, similar to everything a bagel goes through being cooked... if it isn't dead after all that, then it'll sing like an angel!!!
@ralph17p
@ralph17p Ай бұрын
I don't think I could put "vintage guitar tone" into words either, but you definitely nailed it. Nice work.
@snowscape
@snowscape 2 жыл бұрын
Tbh there's a lot to compliment about this video and your work, but straight up you just casually taught me that desirous was a word I can use as an alternative for desirable and like, that's pretty legit! Awesome vid, subscribed for more guitar-making content!!
@snowscape
@snowscape 2 жыл бұрын
On the topic of words/language, totally agree that talking about instrument tone comes off as vague and subjective a lot of the time; it seems that words fail to convey the ineffable depths of our senses and intuition ("raw sound" heheh). Musicians trying to describe timbre reminds me of wine-tasting descriptions in their aesthetic stylization sometimes. I can imagine commissioning a guitar and being all impressionistic about the tone I want like some sommelier: "why, yes I would like the tone to be 'well balanced and nicely integrated with oak, ripe and round with a hint of white pepper in a fresh new world style.'" (poached from a random Mourvèdre wine description). I'm sure some luthiers could probably roll with that description and come up with some creative tonewood/construction to get somewhere close to the vibe. Regardless of whether "vintage tone" has an absolute true meaning, you did a great job as sonic decoder for this one!! My sonic palate isn't so dialed as to pick out guitar tonewoods or anything, but it sounded beautiful to me and I'm sure your client will treasure it. Presentation is just as important for wines as it is in instrument design, and that marbled paper inlay is a nice touch and super tasteful. Gotta find me a guitar with that rich Merlot sound one day XD BRB gonna go reclaim some aged wine barrel woods to make the most aromatic Telecaster the world has ever heard~
@triple6wolfi
@triple6wolfi 2 жыл бұрын
Wow sounds exceptional! Wish I had money to order one for myself haha. Quality tone and master crafted instrument for sure!
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