Ref: S5D37555
This course is supplementary to the nine-day Musical Instrument Making course, held in the spring. It enables you to have time to design and make the moulds and jigs necessary for making your chosen instrument. It will also help you to select and prepare some of the woods required. It may also be used to finish and set up instruments made on a previous course.
What you should achieve:
Teaching is generally on a one-to-one basis, catering for each students individual needs, and dictated by ability, previous experience and knowledge. There will be group demonstrations where appropriate. As the course takes place in the main workshop, adjacent to the other courses in this series, you will also gain knowledge by interaction with fellow students and other tutors. Those starting certain instruments have information packs provided by the tutors. Most instruments require attendance on several courses to complete.This may depend on your skill base and opportunity to continue work at home, so we recommend you discuss this with your tutor prior to the course when they contact you.
Health and safety is discussed as an integral part of the course.
Please note: humidity levels in the workshop are variable to dry; whilst the College has addressed this, some factors are beyond our control, and instruments are brought at your own risk.
The instrument you wish to complete
As soon as you receive confirmation of your place, please indicate which instrument you wish to work on by emailing: [email protected]
If you are new to the course, please give details of your past experience in instrument making and fine woodworking. We will pass this information to the tutor who will contact you to discuss this and the materials required. Alternatively, if you are bringing a part-made instrument, please bring the materials and information relating to this, or inform the tutor about what you need.
Any hand tools you may have or think you may need (marked with your name) Appropriate workshop clothes and stout covered footwear (not sandals) are essential.
Tools Some woodworking tools are provided by the College, including a variety of planes, chisels, drills, etc. However, numbers are limited, so you should ideally bring your own, if you have them, to include the following:
Useful tools for making templates, jigs and moulds: 300 or 150mm steel rule Pencil Engineer’s square Scalpel or marking knife Block plane Half round file and rasp Glue brush
Finishing materials: Bench cloth Cotton rags Fine flat files Nut files
Any tools you need in order to continue with basic construction (if in any doubt, please ask the tutor – please mark tools with your name) Chisels Cabinet scrapers Straight edge Smoothing plane Low angled block plane Flat thumb plane Spoke shave G clamps (4 if possible, 3” or 4”) Sharpening stone
Available from tutor: If you are making a new instrument, a charge for materials, timber and drawings, if supplied, should be paid to the tutor at the start of the course.
On this course, the tutor can supply most of the materials to you individually and will agree the specific requirements with you before the course starts. The charge should be paid to him directly before the end of the course by cash or bank transfer.
The following is a guide price for a set of wood (e.g. Indian rosewood or maple back and sides, spruce or cedar soundboard, mahogany neck, ebony fingerboard, fretwire, bridge blank, head veneer, struts, linings, bindings, purflings and rosette):
The timber costs listed are approximate to give a guide only, and final costs will depend on individual choice and grade of timber. Costs of strings, machine heads and finishing materials are not included.
Classical guitar £285 Acoustic guitar £310 Ukulele £110#
The classical guitar option is a traditional 'Torres' type instrument. The steel string option is a Martin style OM guitar. These are ideal first instrument projects; it may be possible to build another type of guitar, but this will need to be discussed with the tutor prior to the start of the course.
Instruments marked # are simpler to make and are suitable first instruments. While the aim is to complete these in one nine-day course, please be aware that this is not always possible and you may need to return for a subsequent course.
Please note that a guitar takes approximately 100 hours to make and therefore should be regarded as a major project. You may need to participate in more than two courses to complete your instrument.
Please wear appropriate clothing/aprons for the workshop or studio, this includes stout covered footwear (no sandals or open toes).
Arrival day
Residential students can arrive from 4pm, non-residential students to arrive by 7.15pm for registration. Students arriving earlier are welcome to purchase dinner in the College Dining Room from 6pm.
Students meet their tutor in the Bar at 7.30pm prompt to go to studios.
First Teaching session: 7.30pm - 9pm (attendance is essential)
Daily timetable
Course teaching: 9.15am - 5pm
Morning session: 9.15am - 12.45pm including coffee/tea break
Lunch break: 12.45pm - 2pm*
Afternoon session: 2pm - 5pm including coffee/tea break
Teaching finishes: 5pm
Evening working: students may have access to workshops until 9pm, but only with permission from the tutor and provided any health and safety guidelines are observed.
Departure day
Course teaching: 9.15am - 3pm
Teaching finishes: 3pm
Residential students will need to check out of rooms by 10am. Please note, the tutor may make slight variations to the daily timetable as required.
*Lunch can be purchased on campus, view options
Residential option available. Find out accommodation costs and how to book here.