Time for a new calfskin head
The tension hoop is added
A dab hand is needed . . .
The neck is loosely fitted
Mostly done, front view
Mostly done, back view
The original case is marked
Here's the problem
First piece
Then I did the sides
The result
Outside filler pieces
And the same thing for the bottom
The result so far
The whole process is repeated for the top
Whew!
Replacing the metal lip
Rescued again by luck
Lip and kerfed strips, all dry
I decided on stain and urethane
The hardware got installed
Lining
And it fits!
Not all surprises are bad
Stripping the neck
Gluing the dowel stick to the neck
The tailpin had broken in the dowel stick
The pot was smaller than the original one on the n…
The raw materials
Staining was problematic
The repair in progress
The problem
Jorma Kaukonen at work
Looks as if summer's almost over
Wet snow in the woods
Next to the church
Hanging on as autumn approaches
Surveying the wreckage
Celebrity Chef Matt Rapposelli slices a giant puff…
The fate of the giant puffball
Kirchen, Burbridge, and Bohren
Jorma Kaukonen in concert
College baseball
University of Missouri cheerleader, worried
Notre Dame's Ara Parseghian
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Why it's a Whyte Laydie


The Whyte Laydie was so called because it wasn't stained in the traditional dark brown. But Whyte Laydie banjos had something more -- the Fairbanks "Electric" tone ring. Electricity had nothing to do with it -- nowadays, the inventor might call it the "digital" tone ring -- but the heavy brass ring, scalloped as it is, produces a beautiful, bell-like tone, which is why these instruments are highly sought after. Vega put tortoise-shell binding even where it would seldom be seen.
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