Hello everyone, I know that it's been a while since my last post but we are here now to smouthly continue our journey.
When you think about the process of bulding a new instrument, it may appear to be a linear process, but in reality this is much more like art than it is like carpentry. The wood needs to be worked, glued, shaved, and modeled before it is made into something new and beautiful.
The violin maker takes a block of wood which is created by cutting a radial slice of the huge maple and spruce trees used for this purpose. Then he takes those slices and cuts them to two thinner slices, these are opened like two pages of a book and need to be glued together back to back in the most exact manner.
Let me tell you that it is a serious challenge for violin makers and it takes many hours and many many wood shavings in order to reach that exact pairing of the two sides.
As you can see in the pictures below, this is extremely hard, as the violin maker has to put all his weight in order to push through the maple and spruce wood. The shavings are indeed very rough at the beginning of the process, but in time they become smaller and more curved. And finally, when the general shape of the external arch is reached and the surface needs to be smoothened, they become thinner and thinner until they reach the desirable result.