The luthier you see here is Dominique Nicosia, a french master. The video was shot by Baptiste Buob in the workshop of the Musée de la Lutherie de Mirecourt. It's a shame that you don't mention the video-maker and the violin-maker in this video.
If you use a saw you then have to sand it down with can cause uneven sides. I’m in secondary school 10th grade and we’ve done stuff like this so we have to know. Yes we’ve made instruments.
it's 2am, i was looking for a video to go to sleep. i have only seen 20 seconds of the video and i can't sleep now because all i think about is how the fuck did he cut wood like butter?!?! i need to try it
I love woodworking sounds. This is not only amazing to listen to but fascinating to watch. Seeing a craftsman make a work of art is phenomenal. And seeing how a nice handmade violin is made is interesting. I would love to know the source of this if there is one. I wanna show this guy appreciation
and i assure you the wood is very, very satisfactory to work. this guy is french, and i already seen this very video under another name on youtube, but i can't found it :(
Luthiers always amaze me. I look at the violin in the beginning of the video and then look at my own, and it’s always incredible to see how they manage to turn wood into an instrument held together by just glue and pressure. I can’t even imagine the patience this must take.
I crochet. Knots get in the string and yarn. It's therapuetic to work at gerting them out without cutting the yarn. I once made an afghan for my Dad. I had about four feet high mafe when I noticed a mistake in the second row. I tore it all out to fix that mistake. Yes, I did finish the blanket. It had a guitar cross-stitched on it and also music notes.
My mums dad, my papa, used to make violins (among other instruments) for fun as a hobby. i never got to meet him as he passed a year before i was born, but youtube randomly recommended this to me and i cant help but think he’s looking out for me. so thank you for making this gorgeous violin and for reminding me of my grandfather. i wish you the best sir.
This video actually gives me a lot of nostalgia. I played the violin when I was younger and this video reminds me a lot of those times. My dad is also a construction worker and taught me how to carve wood so this kind of thing brings back a lot from my childhood even if it was just twiddling away at a stick I found outside.
This looks insanely difficult and still somehow easier than I thought it would be to make a violin. I figured you’d need to sacrifice at least seven goats before every step and offer a part of your soul to make it turn out right.
Yes the tools have to be sharp. but he only showed himself carving the spruce top, which is really soft. carving the back is a bitch as maple is a hell of a lot harder.
7:51 This is the best part for me. I just love seeing somebody working on something while producing a repetitive but also soothing sound. It really comforts me.
1. No EDM (or any kind of music at all). 2. No Fast Speed Forward Play. 3. No Talking. Now that's Satisfying, Meditative, Soothing, Calm and anti-Anxiety.
People are saying that this looks easy to make. It’s truly not, but any true professional in their element will make what they do look incredibly easy which is what is displayed here. If you think you can make a working violin by hand from scratch, be my guest, but it wont beat the craftsmanship of a professional who’s done this for a long time
Don’t know if anyone else had this happen to them, but while watching this beautiful video, it seems to have the last third of the video corrupt cause there’s a lot of odd pixels and almost seems laggy. It’s the video itself and not UA-cam or my internet cause other videos I watch play perfectly. Though incredible job and keep up the amazing work! Always fascinating to watch this stuff😊
I learned some wood working skills from my grandpa, but nothing this detailed. My grandpa probably could have made this, but I didn’t learn enough. Now all I have are memories of him, and too few of them. I wish I had gone fishing with him more, or sat in on more of his woodworking projects. At least I can still sing along to the songs we enjoyed together, but I’ll never hear him coming in with the harmony again
Imagine being so good at this that being recorded doesn’t even slow you down. I can’t do anything with someone looking over my shoulder like this. Makes it extra impressive.
Absolutely the finest craft video I have ever seen 😮😮😮 Stunning skills, the patience required is enormous and to think, one slip and it’s game over 😮😮😮 Brilliant 👏👏👏
Original Video: ua-cam.com/video/AhWFJ4gwsa4/v-deo.html Dominique Nicosia is the violin maker here and they have their own channel - MIQI. I assumed at first that the channel owner was the violin maker in the video, but then I realized they weren't. I looked around to find if the craftsperson had been credited in the video/descriptions, but it looks like other than a brief glimpse of when Dominique carves the name at the end of the video, there's no mention of the original video owner at all (looks like this channel owner purposely even cut off the watermark in the original vid). I feel like it's extremely unethical to not even credit the person,, I'll just go watch it at the original source..
Really really good work, I love woodworking sounds, but so so bad for the low quality of image in the second part of the video, that ruin the thing ;-;
They can, but the glue they use (hide glue i think, made out of boiled animal skins) is really strong and long-lasting, so they usually don't. Getting a violin body back open is actually a bit of a process and requires a lot of care and attention to avoid damaging the instrument
They don't use glue I'm pretty sure. They use pressure, so basically the pieces are pressed against each other really hard. I'm pretty sure using glue on a violin will damage/break the instrument just go to a luthier if there's something wrong with your violin.
@@outgoingblur no, they definitely use glue. Watch any luthier open up a violin, they need to shove a palette knife in between the sides and the back/top in order to separate them because of the glue. Pressure alone won't hold the top or back on.
Yes. They are glued together, and they have some braces to reinforce some areas. The glue they use can also be heated up and removed, so that future repair work is possible. Old ones do sometimes come apart a little, but as long as it is taken in for repairs right after, it can be glued up just fine.
Me at 1am watching this thinking to myself, “I think I can make one of these”
This looks easy. 2 hours tops.
But dang it aint
@@MrUnit731 nah. You have to go to a luthier school to get this ammount of skill. Don’t woosh me lol
@@jakuboronowicz8421 it was a joke. I do appreciate the craftsmanship here. I couldn’t do this at gunpoint!
That’s the exact same immediate thought I had I’m sobbing
The luthier you see here is Dominique Nicosia, a french master. The video was shot by Baptiste Buob in the workshop of the Musée de la Lutherie de Mirecourt.
It's a shame that you don't mention the video-maker and the violin-maker in this video.
I stopped watching once I realized there was no crediting or (seemingly) any permission for them to post this.
Usually they at least add credit in the description, but nothing on this one.
Who cares who made it
Just watch and enjoy
@@Foul.Tarnished410 No.
@@Foul.Tarnished410No.
This guy looks like he would give me a quest.
AHAHSGHGFJ
Objective:
Give wood worker 10 wood
(optional) give wood worker 10 cursed wood
Reward:
10,000 xp
wood worker’s suit
God i love the coms on this channel
@@RustyCurtainsSound bro same ALSKD
💀
This guy really said “I don’t need a saw, I got dis knife. Cuts wood like buttah”
The saw would make the surface too rough
If you use a saw you then have to sand it down with can cause uneven sides. I’m in secondary school 10th grade and we’ve done stuff like this so we have to know. Yes we’ve made instruments.
I literally thought he was using a butter knife at first
it's 2am, i was looking for a video to go to sleep. i have only seen 20 seconds of the video and i can't sleep now because all i think about is how the fuck did he cut wood like butter?!?! i need to try it
I love woodworking sounds. This is not only amazing to listen to but fascinating to watch. Seeing a craftsman make a work of art is phenomenal. And seeing how a nice handmade violin is made is interesting. I would love to know the source of this if there is one. I wanna show this guy appreciation
and i assure you the wood is very, very satisfactory to work.
this guy is french, and i already seen this very video under another name on youtube, but i can't found it :(
I think I found it :)
ua-cam.com/video/iphJwCNbNSI/v-deo.html
@@otten69 the title is german but in the title there's also the name of the men who made the violin
@@otten69 so it's not his channel, but now we got a name so thank you :)
Dominic Nicosia maybe. Based on how he branded the violin
Luthiers always amaze me. I look at the violin in the beginning of the video and then look at my own, and it’s always incredible to see how they manage to turn wood into an instrument held together by just glue and pressure. I can’t even imagine the patience this must take.
Y E S S I R
I crochet. Knots get in the string and yarn. It's therapuetic to work at gerting them out without cutting the yarn. I once made an afghan for my Dad. I had about four feet high mafe when I noticed a mistake in the second row. I tore it all out to fix that mistake. Yes, I did finish the blanket. It had a guitar cross-stitched on it and also music notes.
@@patriciajrs46 I salute your patience and dedication 👊🏼
anyone else having video problems the entire half end?
I thought it was my wifi i even lowered the quality lol good to know im not alone in my suffering
There was probably a rendering issue
Yup
Same lmfao I thought my phones gpu is dying
yeah, i was wondering if it was just my wifi but no it’s the video
My mums dad, my papa, used to make violins (among other instruments) for fun as a hobby. i never got to meet him as he passed a year before i was born, but youtube randomly recommended this to me and i cant help but think he’s looking out for me. so thank you for making this gorgeous violin and for reminding me of my grandfather. i wish you the best sir.
He makes such a delicate but labor intensive job look so easy, it almost makes me think I could do it myself
You can if you put the effort into it and have the right mindset and motivation! But that's only if you want to make violins 🎻
trans ralsei supremacy
@@discopaws fr!
Great craftsmanship
Furry cult
IKER
REKI
he’s so good he doesn’t even need sandpaper
You are the sandpaper 🤯
@@Avogadros_number makes sense, i'm kind of abrasive *ba dum tsss*
He used a file...same thing.
Rough as fk
@@yGKeKe no.
This video actually gives me a lot of nostalgia. I played the violin when I was younger and this video reminds me a lot of those times. My dad is also a construction worker and taught me how to carve wood so this kind of thing brings back a lot from my childhood even if it was just twiddling away at a stick I found outside.
This looks insanely difficult and still somehow easier than I thought it would be to make a violin. I figured you’d need to sacrifice at least seven goats before every step and offer a part of your soul to make it turn out right.
nah, that's how you Play a violin.
Hey thats jokes
I'm sad that when you start seeing it all come together the video starts breaking up
This is the type of ASMR that Ron Swanson would fall asleep to 😂😂😂😂
The lighting is perfect.
I never thought I’d love hearing someone make a violin *Chefs kiss✨
Good video, appreciate it so much. It’s a shame that the last 10 minuets or so had some issues. I would love to watch the last half without problems!
That’s not the video glitching, that’s just what happens when you try to watch an artist work for too long
@@personiguess2453 his raw skill was disrupting the camera as he worked
Based on the channel name, I'm guessing it's stolen content
I was starting to wonder if my phone was broken
Oh phew, I was thinking those last few minutes were on my end
Oml when things slot perfectly and effortlessly into place, that’s the stuff right there 😩👌
That tool must be so sharp to just scoop the wood out like that. Amazing.
The wood might be soft dunno
Yes the tools have to be sharp. but he only showed himself carving the spruce top, which is really soft. carving the back is a bitch as maple is a hell of a lot harder.
7:51 This is the best part for me. I just love seeing somebody working on something while producing a repetitive but also soothing sound. It really comforts me.
I never realized how calming woodworking sounds were until I’m half asleep listening to this
Checkpoint 9:32
1. No EDM (or any kind of music at all).
2. No Fast Speed Forward Play.
3. No Talking.
Now that's Satisfying, Meditative, Soothing, Calm and anti-Anxiety.
I came for the ASMR but i stayed because of the craftsmanship.
Never saw how a violin is made, so it was very interesting to see a pro at work
Such a shame the video quality corrupted the last half of the filming.
It became tragically unwatchable.
I will never be awake until then.
This is a masterpiece... insane craftsmanship and the amount of tools and knowledge it takes to do this would take years to learn
This brings back memories of when our music teacher would show us how instruments are made. Good times
This is without a doubt one of THE most satisfying videos on UA-cam that I have ever watched in my life.
He kept filing/chiseling away I didn't think there was gonna be any violin left 😅 absolutely amazing work!
The last bit of the video didnt feel so good
People are saying that this looks easy to make. It’s truly not, but any true professional in their element will make what they do look incredibly easy which is what is displayed here. If you think you can make a working violin by hand from scratch, be my guest, but it wont beat the craftsmanship of a professional who’s done this for a long time
me watching this late at night with no motivation to even get up and piss: yeah i think i could do this, seems easy
Ikr
Don’t know if anyone else had this happen to them, but while watching this beautiful video, it seems to have the last third of the video corrupt cause there’s a lot of odd pixels and almost seems laggy. It’s the video itself and not UA-cam or my internet cause other videos I watch play perfectly. Though incredible job and keep up the amazing work! Always fascinating to watch this stuff😊
God this video needs more views and appreciation for all the hard work he does
Wish it was 5 hours. Didn't want this to end.
I was wondering when I'd see this as an ASMR video! It's just great :-)
If you forgot this video well here it is
This is a great video, thank you very much.
EDIT: I just wanted to add that this Luthier does some really great work.
you know you're good at what you do when you make it look easy
Your hands are truly magical sir :)
Dude pls make more content like this, it helps us sleep and it's interesting/educational
the control and precision. Craftsmanship is a gift
Amazing video until it started corrupting half way through and I had a stroke trying to finish it.
Yeah, I couldn't keep watching after it happened...
So many of these tools look really old, as if they've been passed down for generations. Love it.
The production quality is so good I'm going to watch this again on TV.
wow i didn’t know how violins were made, thank you for showing me
I learned some wood working skills from my grandpa, but nothing this detailed. My grandpa probably could have made this, but I didn’t learn enough. Now all I have are memories of him, and too few of them. I wish I had gone fishing with him more, or sat in on more of his woodworking projects. At least I can still sing along to the songs we enjoyed together, but I’ll never hear him coming in with the harmony again
I love this so much. It calmes me down wereever I listen to & watch it ❤️ thank you
This is a real man’s asmr
This is amazing to watch and listen too! Beautiful workmanship.
Imagine being so good at this that being recorded doesn’t even slow you down. I can’t do anything with someone looking over my shoulder like this. Makes it extra impressive.
I honestly thought he cut the first piece of wood with a butter nice I was so impressed
Absolutely the finest craft video I have ever seen 😮😮😮 Stunning skills, the patience required is enormous and to think, one slip and it’s game over 😮😮😮 Brilliant 👏👏👏
This is awesome, I'm gonna make something with wood today.
Good to see Rick from the walking dead is doing well
This is SOOO good wood carving ASMR!! Wish it was longer than 30min.
What is asmr?
Me trying to convince myself I can do this at 2 AM when I can’t even make a straight line on a paper with a ruler
Awesome! Really amazing craftsmanship!
Best feeling is making the instrument and playing it
Why buy a violin when you can just make one lol
Lel
Becuz, mine makes sounds like A deep farting cat ass
@@LuftUberSoldat cool
ikr? like bruh. people so lazy nowadays.
@@brandonsavage7008 people just don’t want to waste their time making a whole ass violin
I am loving those closing clamps.
Além de ser um ótimo asmr, você ainda aprende a criar um violino 🎻
despite getting a bit crispy at moments, i would say this video gave me solid 8/10 tingles
Now's that's legit!⚡
12:30 here you go
🙏🙏🙏
Beautiful work!
Dang making something like this in near dark ... That's talent.
Bro! Anyone else's shocked that he slicing the wood like it's a warm peace of butter?
this fellow spends A LOT of time sharpening his tools I'd wager based on how they perform.
Original Video: ua-cam.com/video/AhWFJ4gwsa4/v-deo.html
Dominique Nicosia is the violin maker here and they have their own channel - MIQI. I assumed at first that the channel owner was the violin maker in the video, but then I realized they weren't. I looked around to find if the craftsperson had been credited in the video/descriptions, but it looks like other than a brief glimpse of when Dominique carves the name at the end of the video, there's no mention of the original video owner at all (looks like this channel owner purposely even cut off the watermark in the original vid). I feel like it's extremely unethical to not even credit the person,, I'll just go watch it at the original source..
What a wonderful video. Great job
i watched this whole video just chilling, but then when he put the strings on and started to tune, i started to tear up!
It is unreal how they have constant ads popping up at volume level 9 million times higher than the ASMR video that is playing. The irony.
"new tingles unlocked" LOL
That's fascinating!
man slicing though wood with a butter knife: 😄
me, trying to get a little scoop of the refrigerated butter for my toast: 😑
So this man can do carpentry and still PLAY the violin?? Wow👏👏👏
Downvoters are devoid of any skill or passion or their own, apparently. This was enthralling and soothing. Thanks.
Or they downvoted because of the severe artifacting, an actual issue with the video, if not with the content.
shaving the wood like butter satisfying
Great craftsmanship 👏👏
This was the most interesting video I have ever seen 😏😏😌😌😌
Really really good work, I love woodworking sounds, but so so bad for the low quality of image in the second part of the video, that ruin the thing ;-;
Is anybody else here because they were feeling a bit stressed and it’s videos like these that helps you forget the stress for a while? Yeah, me too!
Absolutely amazing the work and art that goes into this, skill honed through years. I really wish the video credited the creator and videographer
Wow good job! 👏👏👏
I am mesmerized.
Stunning master skills
Omg your so underrated I feel asleep so quickly
If you forgot this video here it is
safest asmr to be caught watching.
This is the tingliest goddamn video I’ve ever goddamn seen
Perfect for a weekend warrior!
just wanted to put some ASMR in my ear while doing my homework, ended up watching the video in honest admiration, now I am late for said homework T-T
And you wonder why violins are so damn expensive, this is why.
yeah it looks like a lot of effort and talent
So violin bodies are essentially glued together? Do old ones come apart after rough use? This video was really cool.
They can, but the glue they use (hide glue i think, made out of boiled animal skins) is really strong and long-lasting, so they usually don't. Getting a violin body back open is actually a bit of a process and requires a lot of care and attention to avoid damaging the instrument
@@eibhlinniccolla Wow okay, pretty sturdy then! Thank you for telling me, that's really interesting :D
They don't use glue I'm pretty sure. They use pressure, so basically the pieces are pressed against each other really hard. I'm pretty sure using glue on a violin will damage/break the instrument just go to a luthier if there's something wrong with your violin.
@@outgoingblur no, they definitely use glue. Watch any luthier open up a violin, they need to shove a palette knife in between the sides and the back/top in order to separate them because of the glue. Pressure alone won't hold the top or back on.
Yes. They are glued together, and they have some braces to reinforce some areas. The glue they use can also be heated up and removed, so that future repair work is possible. Old ones do sometimes come apart a little, but as long as it is taken in for repairs right after, it can be glued up just fine.
I wanted to fall asleep, but I ended up learning how to veneer a violin body
This is as satisfying as that one scene from Toy Story 2 when Woody gets all tidied up by the old man. Change my mind
Same, I could almost hear the music from that clip playing in the background
That's so cool
Skills 💯
Guy makes a violin
Me= impressive craftsmanship
Him : plays it at the end
Me= the sudden feeling of being useless is rushing to me like a flood
It looks and sounds weirdly wreckless. And yet it's so presice!
Посмотрела на одном дыхании 😍