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I'm interested in your story as a luthier
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Author:  SnowManSnow [ Thu Oct 05, 2017 8:37 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

Thanks to those who have responded to this.
I find each person's journey and "why" fascinating.


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Author:  jfmckenna [ Fri Oct 06, 2017 8:32 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

Ok well, I don't really consider myself a Luthier but people seem to insist on calling me one and I don't argue over it. I guess now that I have built my first mandolin and a few ukuleles then perhaps I am a 'maker of stringed instrument.' But prior to that I was a guitar maker and hobbyist. Like Hesh said before there isn't a whole lot of money in it so in a way we are like actors. I mean real actors not Hollywood actors, the ones who dedicate their lives to their art and perform in little dinner theaters and play houses but also find themselves incapable of doing anything else. Of course a lot of them have day jobs too. I have reduced the time it takes me to build a guitar to where I can make at least $15/hour doing it. It's a labor of love.

My first gig out of college was working as a geologist for a large unnamed energy company which proceed to suck my soul out with a straw and spit it back out. Working in the 'environmental' department of an energy company doesn't make you a very well liked person. So I quit and moved back to my little town with enough in the bank to live for a few years if worse came to worse.

So I started a repair shop for a few years back when I got started in the early 90's. I had built a guitar already on my summer breaks in college and one day I walked into a local music shop and got talking to the owner who hired me on the spot to do repairs. I had no Idea what I was doing, I kid you not. If there were Internet forums back then I'd probably be flamed to shame for some of the questions I asked... Yes I did once use dowels to repair a broken headstock <hangs head in shame>

But all we had was books back in those dark days and of course the LMI catalog! So I got to learning and eventually I got pretty good at it. At my peak I was doing repairs for 4 stores in my area. I finally was able to add some chicken to my beans and rice. And then I watched as the Internet developed and the big boxes boomed and the mom and pop shops started closing down one by one. The last one closed down about a year ago. I still had a good enough reputation for repairs but I threw in the towel, went back to school and got me a day job.

Today I still do repairs but now I have much more time to build and that's what I do for fun, or perhaps it's an obsession and a mental illness, I still have not figured that part out. I'm building my 57th instrument now, a spruce top ukulele.

Author:  ernie [ Sat Oct 07, 2017 7:30 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

2 years after I had a guitar built for myself I started acquiring tools in 1973. by 1975 I was doing carpentry work .I took a shop /joinery course at PVI in maple ridge bc , then I went back t school to get a degree in Ind arts education UBC simon fraser langara college, then I returned to cabinetmaking in 1985/86 .When I had back surgery , in may of 89 , it was time time to back off . We sold our home in surrey and moved to the us . I bought a gtr/vln shop in 1991. Prior to that In surrey I was buying up a lot of used guitars/vlns refurbishing them and selling them. So running this biz was easy .After 4 yrs in LA , .Only green cards in hand , our family moved to the midwest. I spent time doing vln repairs and bowmaking , but always wanted to build gtrs. Then in 1997 I started building guitars and ukes . Never looked back . Wish I could have started earlier but the constraints of marriage , job, children mtge etc eld me back happy to just be a loofier !!

Author:  Rocky Road [ Sat Oct 07, 2017 9:52 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

Hesh that was the longest post I’ve ever read. The most I’ve ever made on the several builds I’ve sold is .55 cents per hour. You are way ahead of me.
Ok. I’ll bite. 40 years ago I met a fellow with whom I started working. We took on some cabinet making and sign making jobs. Wood signs. His real passion was building guitars. He was good at it ( the several that he had made). This was back when Cumpiano’s and Sloan’s books were the only out there. I was fascinated, and vowed that someday I was going to do the same. Realizing that learning how to build guitars while earning a living wage would be difficult at best, my dream was set aside. Over the next nearly four decades I became a master carpenter-woodworker. Eventually running my own company. But I still carried the dream of building at least one guitar. Finally six years ago, I realized that the time had come and I dove in. I love it. It’s the most fun I’ve ever had not making money.
Having been a guitar player since my early teens and having the innate ability to work with my hands makes this a real passion.
The more I build, the more I respect those who have been doing this with consistent results of great looking and amazing sounding guitars. It’s not as easy as I used to think. I’m walking in the footsteps of giants. And lovin’ it.


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Author:  klooker [ Sun Oct 08, 2017 9:52 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

I'm not a luthier, just a hobbyist but here -

Had been a woodworking geek for years & had a small stockpile of exotic woods. Hadn't done much with the exotics but was fascinated by them. I actually passed up an opportunity to buy Cocobolo half logs (about 4 to 8 feet long) for $1.00/lb. I couldn't afford it at the time because the smallest one weighed 160 lbs.

Anyhow had a lovely Taylor 214CE (plywood back & sides) and saw that I could build a Martin kit. Built the Martin & it sounded better than the Taylor. Sold the Taylor.

Just do it for fun although I've sold a few.

Kevin Looker

Author:  ernie [ Sun Oct 08, 2017 3:59 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

hey kevin, There/s a posh golf course 1 mile from our house.I promised my wife that if I became brain dead I would take up golf instead of loofery, with all those old guys, just kidding of course!

Author:  Haans [ Tue Oct 10, 2017 8:24 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

I was a builder of mandolins and guitars for over 25 years (the second time). I built my first guitar at Minneapolis Vocational cabinetmaking school in the early '70's after a stint in the Air Force. Had a hard time convincing them that it was "cabinetmaking", but they finally graduated me. Musta been 30. I saw a course in violin repair at Red Wing Vocational was being offered and I enrolled in that course and was part of the first graduating class. I did work on violins, but built my second guitar there. Graduated and three of us bought out a small repair shop. Did that for a few years and built my first F model mandolin and a few more guitars. It finally went bust, so I offered my services to another store and spent several years there doing repairs and building guitars.
Somewhere along the line, ditzco became popular and acoustic guitar sales dropped through the floor. I just flat gave up and got a job in a small cabinet shop. Was a cabinetmaker for all of the late '70's, '80's and around '91, started building mandolins again part time. A few years passed and I bought tools, worked evenings and weekends on instruments. Meanwhile, I had changed cabinet shops several times, finally ending up in a store fixture company. After several years, totally dissatisfied with the job's working conditions, I had a full shop in the basement, talked to my wife and went in one Monday and packed my tools. I had 4 orders at the time. I never felt better in my life...a realistic vision, an element of fear, $1,500./month insurance for two...what else could you ask for!
So, I built mandolins. I went to IBMA 7 or 8 years in a row and some other festivals, displayed mandolins. At one time I had a 4 year backlog.
That's the good side.
Then there was the other side.
So, I built mandolins. I built lots of mandolins. I think my top of the line F5 was $2,500. in the beginning. It's a shame what you will charge to sell an instrument in the beginning. Works out to.50/hr if you are lucky. Once you are established, you can charge more, but you get stuck in a tier system. No matter what I did, I could never break into the top tier. Corporations can afford advertising, we can't, so we rely on word of mouth. It was when I was going to IBMA that I realized how corporations have stacked the deck. I can say that I never gave an instrument away. Never had a endorser that didn't pay for an instrument.
Was in the early 2000's that I realized my orders were tapering off a tad. I was actually gaining on that 4 year backlog. Round the time of Shrub's war, I realized I was going to have to build guitars again too. I also took early retirement at 62. I was able to make my whole wait list, and build one extra F5C, along with a few other mandolins and mandolas.
I jumped into guitar building with both feet. To me, guitar building was simple compared to an F5. Getting the tone I was looking for was harder. Mandolins could be strung in the white for final thickness adjustments. Relying on what I had learned in15 years of mandolin wood taught me several things.
I built an 0-45 Joan Baez for my wife, but then decided to find other instruments to emulate. I settled on Larsons as I am a big Piedmont blues fan. Also decided to build Stella's and Holzapfel 12's. That's a long way from Martin and Gilson...
As there was no information on Larson's, Stella's and not much on Holzapfels, I dug my way around trying to find photos and any information on Larson guitars. Meanwhile, I tried to build something similar to Larsons based on the little information that I had. Took several years, but finally found my tone.
I knew that I was suffering from COPD a number of years before I had to quit. Got to where I was having big headaches every morning when I got up, finally had to go on O2 at night, but kept working during the day. Pulmonologists told me I'd know when it was time to quit, but it really did surprise me when, one day, I walked up the stairs and told my wife I was done building. That was 3 years ago. Left quite a few partially finished instruments, and am having two finished off for me.
One thing I can say is that 1 of maybe 100 that try and follow through will find success and make enough $$$ to live on. How many years that would last is another question. The old saying is: "Don't quit your day job."
At times, it was fun, lots of times frustrating and had to quit WAY before I was ready...

Author:  Photoweborama [ Tue Mar 19, 2019 10:20 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

I fit the definition of Luthier, but I don’t like to call myself one because I don’t build guitars.

Definition: “A luthier (/ˈluːtiər/ LOO-ti-ər) is someone who builds or repairs string instruments generally consisting of a neck and a sound box. The word "luthier" comes from the French word luth, which means lute.”

But I setup, repair, and restore mostly guitars, but also violins, banjos, Mandolins, etc.

I repair chips, finish problems, broken headstocks, etc.
Strange enough I’m self taught. It requires logic, common sense, and a lot of research. Plus humility to ask others when you need help.

I work out of my house and have a shop in the garage and one in the house. I’ve been doing this for 18 years now. It’s supposed to be a hobby in retirement, but I get so much work I had to stop advertising three years ago.

I have to really work at pacing myself. I want to work on everything now, but I’ve had to tell customers I have a three month backlog right now. But that doesn’t stop them. They tell me to take my time... meanwhile I have cases stacked up like crazy waiting for me....in my nightmares when I sleep,,,[FACE SCREAMING IN FEAR][FACE WITH TEARS OF JOY][FACE WITH TEARS OF JOY]


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Author:  Mike OMelia [ Wed Mar 20, 2019 12:46 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

I’m interested in my story too. Even more so, my wife is interested. I think her angle is me breaking even. Or better. Why would anyone care about that?

Author:  B. Howard [ Wed Mar 20, 2019 6:42 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

Here is s short video some folks did of me a few years ago where I explain a bit about that.
https://howardguitars.blogspot.com/2016/05/a-brief-introduction-to-me-and-my-craft.html

Author:  violinvic [ Wed Mar 20, 2019 9:38 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

I was playing bluegrass mandolin and guitar. Decided to order a custom fiddle to match my Randy Wood mandolin. Ordered it from a "Master Luthier". After wrangling with cops and attorneys, I fiddle shaped object showed up at my house. It looked and played like an eighth grade wood shop project that the kid got a C- on. After working it over to get it playable, the ththoughhit me, "I could build one better than that". And I did. Started making guitars, fiddles, mandolins, Uk's, a dobro, even a carved upright bass. Now I switched to only dreadnought guitars. I do not consider myself a Luthier.

Author:  Clay S. [ Wed Mar 20, 2019 10:28 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

I've been building musical instruments since the mid 70's. I started out building dulcimers and gradually started building many different types of stringed instruments. I would also frequent the flea markets and find old instruments to "fix up" and resell. Some of them have become surprisingly valuable- to someone else.
I have always built instruments as a hobby, and as such have tried to at least be aware of the costs associated with it. I enjoy building instruments at all levels of refinement (or lack thereof). I still build cigar box instruments and formica bodied strumsticks, along with instruments made of rosewood and other exotic materials. I have found that (within limits) it is less about the materials, and more about how they are put together. As a hobbyist it is also about having fun and learning new things.

Author:  bluescreek [ Fri Mar 22, 2019 6:06 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

Got into this to help through an injury. Was off work and always a wood worker. My machinist skills served me well on my first kit. My engineering degree came in handy working out problems and designing jigs. After about 14 guitars I started selling jigs on ebay. after that it took off as a great hobby and afforded me golf and beer money. After 10 years went full time. As of today I am closing in on 300 guitars sold and about 2000 kits. I can't even count the other jigs. Thanks to all that supported us but it is fun.
I started with a Martin kit , then had a few great mentors and was trained at CF Martin in repair for 2 weeks before I became an authorized martin repair shop. I am busy and thankful to have a great way to make money and friends.

Author:  SnowManSnow [ Fri Mar 22, 2019 6:32 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

I love that this post has been resurrected from oct 2017:)
So many great stories


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Author:  Mike Mahar [ Sun Mar 24, 2019 10:26 am ]
Post subject:  Re: I'm interested in your story as a luthier

I have been playing guitar for over 50 years. (Man are my fingers sore). In collage, I found Sloane's book in the library and read it. I thought that someday, maybe, I'll try that. After I bought a house I saw a demonstration of a ShopSmith at a home convention and bought one. At about that time "The New Yankee Workshop" came on so I thought that I could do some of those projects. I made a lot of coffee tables and end tables.
Around 1999, or so, I was wandering around my local bookstore and saw a copy of Cumpiano and Natelson's book and thought that maybe I should give it a try. I read that book a couple of times and then found some newsgroups (That was before forums) about building. I then found the MIMF and, with the help of those sources made a guitar. It was awful but I knew that I could do better.
I've made about 12 instruments over the last 20 years. I've given away most of them to needy guitar players.

I call myself a luthier.
You can't call yourself a doctor, lawyer or electrician without the proper credentials. However, many folk crafts, such as potter, knitter, quilter, don't require any training for you to call yourself one. My favorite is golfer. People call themselves a golfer even if they only go out a few times a season and rip up the course. A golfer is someone who plays golf. If you have the proper credentials, you are called a Golf Pro if you mainly teach at a golf club. You are called a Pro Golfer if you play golf in tournaments for money. For both of these you need your PGA card.
A luthier is someone who makes stringed musical instrument. There is no PGA card equivalent for luthierie.

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