Picky? Moi? Ok, yes, very picky. But then that is why I picked you as the luthier, Tom! Sorry - you'll have to bear with me. Very excited about this one! The body size is still up for grabs ... Great video - and really lovely to have this as part of documenting the build :) Thank you buddy!
Wow! Even with my cheap headphones, I could hear both deep, resonant bass & crystalline trebles. Sounds like both a drum & a bell. Wonderful wood. Awesome video!
One more thing. The barns or sheds from the 19th and early 20th century here in central or northern California are made of Redwood. The structure beams are of HUGE Redwood!
That's a whole lotta love! Right back attcha @Neil Hutchison ! :)
3 роки тому+1
Hello Tom. Redwood trees are huge and are found North of San Francisco along the coast! Great and awesome view via the Pacific Ocean Highway. Sequoia trees are on the Eastern side of California on the Sierra Nevada. I grew up on the foothills if the great Sequoia National Park!
I had the opportunity to examine a pile of Sinker redwood tops aside of Adirondack AAA spruce tops. We started tapping tops and we all looked at each other with smiles. The redwood was just so responsive in every way. Hands down, redwood really surprised me.
Now we’re talking... that is a seriously vocal and balanced piece of tonewood. Lovely, strong low end with fabulous sustain and vibrancy, and nice top end pitches clearly present. You get the feeling this set is going to push the boundaries of the “fire-side” warmth concept to the limits, while mixing it up nicely via those crisp pitchy trebles that are fairly evident. All this before it’s even partnered with the accompanying back and sides! Of course, I am somewhat biased here... having experienced tap-toning a set of cedar for my own guitar build - the sheer excitement and joy - total elation. Have to say Tom, I really enjoyed this one - great series my man, and delighted now to have both the Cedar and the Madagascar reviewed... okay, what’s next??
When you describe a response like that of a classical guitar, I think of building one with this wood and 1 and 7/8 at the nut, allowing a less radical adjustment for a classic player who wants to play some on steel strings. Just a thought.
I have same tonewood with sinker one. sounds dark, deep, rich. I recommend solo finger style player. best backside combination is hard wood like blackwood, macassar ebony. Really good sounds.
Having never been to America I have always had an idealised picture of the place from reading Kerouacs on the road and Steinbeck. There’s such a great passage in Steinbeck’s “Travels with Charlie” he mentioned that these Redwoods were alive when a political assassination took place in Jerusalem. Magic stuff in every sense if you take into account the tiny seed it sprang from to ending up making music to our ears🤯
What do you think about pairing redwood with sassafras? I'm considering a taylor that has sinkwood top with sass back and sides. It's beautiful but a wee bit out of my price range.
Well, it's actually for a mountain dulcimer from a builder in Indiana USA. (New Harmony Dulcimers). I ended up ordering a baritone dulcimer from them with the wood combo that I mentioned, and it sounds beautiful. Very rich and clear sound. I'm loving it. I really like your videos, keep up the good work.
Hi tommy: Hobby builder prepping for my first redwood build. When you say you can't take it as thin as spruce, how thin is too thin? What a good ballpark to shoot for?
@@TomSandsGuitars I mean... I'm a baby guitar builder. Barely off the breast milk. I suppose it depends on the guitar size/shape. But I've started with around .10 inches. (2.5mm)
Rather than thinking about thickness, think about stiffness. Take a piece of spruce and a piece of redwood of the same dimensions, make a note of the difference in deflection under a known load and make your judgement from there. Redwood is so variable so that’s probably the most useful advice I can give you. 🙌
Is the approach in voicing redwood tops different from spruce tops? I know there's no formula in voicing but in terms of bracing patterns or shapes of the braces, is there a difference in what you do?
Do you think you'll plant a redwood grove, or is the climate not right for it? (Giants need about the climate that prevails in most of England, Wales and Scotland, and coastal has the potential to become invasive in the Celtic rainforest, which has a similar climate to that which it knows and loves back in California and Oregon, where it's starting to suffer due to climate change)
Redwood is my favorite top wood; or in my mind, at least equal in status to high-grade Adirondack Red Spruce or any of the variants of Picea abies (Euro Spruce). I love those too, but redwood topped guitars, intelligently designed an built, have these mysterious and profound, almost mystical resonances that are singular to Redwood alone. I have a stash of redwood recycled from a roof beam of a 150-yr-old church in southern Oregon; I've used a couple dozen sets of spectacular Sinker Redwood; and also, some stacks of the famous Tunnel 13 and Tunnel 14 sets. I've built more redwood-topped guitars than any other species of top woods.The coolest thing about these woods is the resins are fully crystallized, since the trees were harvested in the late 1880s to early 1920s. That is some well seasoned wood! Instant vintage tone! Another thing I LOVE about it is, this is all recycled timber, and that means we don't have to incur a great Karmic debt by molesting any of the very few remaining majestic forest giants. Tommy, I love your vids. As a fellow luthier of 23 years, I really admire your intrepid spirit and your passion for your craft. Not to mention, your instruments sound magnificent, and they are the very embodiment of pure elegance in every aspect. I wish I could afford to commission one.
I've never used it, but having played around with chunks, sticks, bits and pieces of redwood and Western red-cedar, I can say I prefer redwood. It's just better, brighter. I think Ramirez popularized WRC, and redwood was not used, simply because classical guitarists were used to a light colored top. Redwood is almost always darker red than cedar, but not always.
Hi Tom, A question about redwood. Would you brace these guitars differently from a spruce top? Would you scallop the braces on redwood tops? I have suggestion for a few episodes on bracing and another on fretboad woods!
Picky? Moi? Ok, yes, very picky. But then that is why I picked you as the luthier, Tom! Sorry - you'll have to bear with me.
Very excited about this one!
The body size is still up for grabs ...
Great video - and really lovely to have this as part of documenting the build :) Thank you buddy!
You're welcome!
Picky is another word for high expectation
I have an East Indian Rosewood back and sides with a Redwood top... Absolutely my favorite acoustic combo ever. I love your videos.
Thank you!!
Just got my fist redwood guitar - very interesting and powerful! Great video!
I could listen to homeboy talk about tonewoods endlessly!
Lol homeboy I like it
we're going to need a bigger tonewood boat
Wow! Even with my cheap headphones, I could hear both deep, resonant bass & crystalline trebles. Sounds like both a drum & a bell. Wonderful wood. Awesome video!
Thanks steven!
One more thing. The barns or sheds from the 19th and early 20th century here in central or northern California are made of Redwood. The structure beams are of HUGE Redwood!
Very responsive tap tone and good fondamentals and amazing sustain...
Thanks
Love Redwood. Love Ophelia. Love Dan. Love you Buddy.
I think so too!
That's a whole lotta love! Right back attcha @Neil Hutchison ! :)
Hello Tom. Redwood trees are huge and are found North of San Francisco along the coast! Great and awesome view via the Pacific Ocean Highway. Sequoia trees are on the Eastern side of California on the Sierra Nevada. I grew up on the foothills if the great Sequoia National Park!
Yep, Redwoods are sequoias, amazing to see them on the coastal roads. I used to enjoy walking amongst the redwoods in Santa Cruz
I had the opportunity to examine a pile of Sinker redwood tops aside of Adirondack AAA spruce tops. We started tapping tops and we all looked at each other with smiles. The redwood was just so responsive in every way. Hands down, redwood really surprised me.
Yeah I build with it a lot. Probably more than anything else honestly!
Ever build an acoustic guitar using sinker redwood? The curly/flamed redwood is awesome too.
Neither sinker nor curly! I love the colours you get with sinker
Now we’re talking... that is a seriously vocal and balanced piece of tonewood. Lovely, strong low end with fabulous sustain and vibrancy, and nice top end pitches clearly present. You get the feeling this set is going to push the boundaries of the “fire-side” warmth concept to the limits, while mixing it up nicely via those crisp pitchy trebles that are fairly evident. All this before it’s even partnered with the accompanying back and sides! Of course, I am somewhat biased here... having experienced tap-toning a set of cedar for my own guitar build - the sheer excitement and joy - total elation. Have to say Tom, I really enjoyed this one - great series my man, and delighted now to have both the Cedar and the Madagascar reviewed... okay, what’s next??
This bodes very well for how this guitar's going to shape up! Can't wait :)
When you describe a response like that of a classical guitar, I think of building one with this wood and 1 and 7/8 at the nut, allowing a less radical adjustment for a classic player who wants to play some on steel strings. Just a thought.
I have same tonewood with sinker one. sounds dark, deep, rich. I recommend solo finger style player. best backside combination is hard wood like blackwood, macassar ebony. Really good sounds.
I'm such big redwood fan!
,e too!
Having never been to America I have always had an idealised picture of the place from reading Kerouacs on the road and Steinbeck. There’s such a great passage in Steinbeck’s “Travels with Charlie” he mentioned that these Redwoods were alive when a political assassination took place in Jerusalem.
Magic stuff in every sense if you take into account the tiny seed it sprang from to ending up making music to our ears🤯
I love travels with Charlie!
Beautiful sound board for sure. Maybe Western Red Cedar next?
Possibly!
Semper virens. It means always (sempre in Italian) green.
Astetics vs Accustics vs Performance. Do are they congruent or do they conflict in guitar crafting.
A great guitar should be a perfect blend of these
Thoughts on the "Sunken" Redwood? vs normal redwood?
I’ve not worked with any although I think sinker woods are very cool, the colours are awesome.
What do you think about pairing redwood with sassafras? I'm considering a taylor that has sinkwood top with sass back and sides. It's beautiful but a wee bit out of my price range.
Hello! Redwood is good with mahogany ?
I really like it, you can here sound clips of many we’ve made
Where do you order redwood from? I was looking to make string instruments using it but I need a thicker cut than would be used for a guitar top.
Do you think a sinker redwood top would go well with Bolivian rosewood back and sides?
i've not a huge amount of experience with sinker, do you have a builder in mind?
Well, it's actually for a mountain dulcimer from a builder in Indiana USA. (New Harmony Dulcimers). I ended up ordering a baritone dulcimer from them with the wood combo that I mentioned, and it sounds beautiful. Very rich and clear sound. I'm loving it. I really like your videos, keep up the good work.
@@aaronflinner6431 thank you Betsy!
Hi tommy: Hobby builder prepping for my first redwood build. When you say you can't take it as thin as spruce, how thin is too thin? What a good ballpark to shoot for?
Really depends on your building style. How thin would you take a spruce top?
@@TomSandsGuitars I mean... I'm a baby guitar builder. Barely off the breast milk. I suppose it depends on the guitar size/shape. But I've started with around .10 inches. (2.5mm)
Rather than thinking about thickness, think about stiffness. Take a piece of spruce and a piece of redwood of the same dimensions, make a note of the difference in deflection under a known load and make your judgement from there. Redwood is so variable so that’s probably the most useful advice I can give you. 🙌
@@TomSandsGuitars thank you sir!
Is the approach in voicing redwood tops different from spruce tops? I know there's no formula in voicing but in terms of bracing patterns or shapes of the braces, is there a difference in what you do?
The process is the same. 👍
Do you think you'll plant a redwood grove, or is the climate not right for it? (Giants need about the climate that prevails in most of England, Wales and Scotland, and coastal has the potential to become invasive in the Celtic rainforest, which has a similar climate to that which it knows and loves back in California and Oregon, where it's starting to suffer due to climate change)
Redwood is my favorite top wood; or in my mind, at least equal in status to high-grade Adirondack Red Spruce or any of the variants of Picea abies (Euro Spruce). I love those too, but redwood topped guitars, intelligently designed an built, have these mysterious and profound, almost mystical resonances that are singular to Redwood alone. I have a stash of redwood recycled from a roof beam of a 150-yr-old church in southern Oregon; I've used a couple dozen sets of spectacular Sinker Redwood; and also, some stacks of the famous Tunnel 13 and Tunnel 14 sets. I've built more redwood-topped guitars than any other species of top woods.The coolest thing about these woods is the resins are fully crystallized, since the trees were harvested in the late 1880s to early 1920s. That is some well seasoned wood! Instant vintage tone! Another thing I LOVE about it is, this is all recycled timber, and that means we don't have to incur a great Karmic debt by molesting any of the very few remaining majestic forest giants.
Tommy, I love your vids. As a fellow luthier of 23 years, I really admire your intrepid spirit and your passion for your craft. Not to mention, your instruments sound magnificent, and they are the very embodiment of pure elegance in every aspect. I wish I could afford to commission one.
Thank you so much Stephen! I really appreciate you kind words and share a love for Redwood!!!
Showing the end grain would be fun…..perfectly quarter sawn?
cuánto cuesta la tapa de secuoya?
I've never used it, but having played around with chunks, sticks, bits and pieces of redwood and Western red-cedar, I can say I prefer redwood. It's just better, brighter. I think Ramirez popularized WRC, and redwood was not used, simply because classical guitarists were used to a light colored top. Redwood is almost always darker red than cedar, but not always.
I’m definitely in the redwood camp
Hi Tom, A question about redwood. Would you brace these guitars differently from a spruce top? Would you scallop the braces on redwood tops? I have suggestion for a few episodes on bracing and another on fretboad woods!
Bubinga please...... great show.
I need to get some!
The best tonewood for guitars, is 'balsa'. Most people are horrible at playing guitar, so 'balsa', is perfect for them.
Balsa is a real species.
Tasmanian King William Pine. Same blood lines...
OMG, if you have a subwoofer...