I currently work out of a purpose-built
workshop in the scenic seaside village of Kommetjie. I
offer musicians the full spectrum of services, including:
- guiding a beginner musician in selecting a first
instrument
- servicing instruments
- helping musicians have an instrument perform optimally
- repairing damaged instruments
- restoring old or antique instruments
- guiding a musician through the complexities of designing
and building their own instrument and
- custom-building an instrument for a discerning musician
or collector.
I have made and repaired guitars and mandolins in South
Africa since 1975, specialising in carved top & back ‘f-hole’ instruments
for jazz players. The bulk of my work until 1989 was
in the area of set-up and basic repair. In 1989 I moved
to the UK where I stayed to further hone my lutherie
skills until returning to Cape Town in January 2004.
In the UK I studied guitar design and construction under
Norman Reed at the Totnes School of Guitarmaking, Totnes,
South Devon, graduating in December 1991. I still make
and repair guitars and mandolins, tending to specialise
in acoustic guitars and mandolins with carved top and
back as in the violin-making tradition.
My making, repair and maintenance of bows for orchestral instruments began in 1989 during which time I studied the making of all parts of the bow inspired with the help of the late Arthur Bultitude of Hawkhurst Kent. My bows stylistically favour models of Dominique Peccate, Pajeot & the Hill bow by W.C.Retford.
I commenced study of the violin family instruments in
September 1992, graduating from Newark School of Violin
Making in 1994, where I majored in restoration under
the tutelage of Glen Collins. I was the first student
in the history of N.S.V.M to graduate as a restorer and
repairer with an informal commendation by Charles Beare
who was responsible for judging graduate’s work
in the final year. The orchestral instruments I make
are generally modelled on Stradivarius and Guarneri ‘Del
Gesù’ depending on the musician's request
and/or preference. For varnish I favour darker but transparent
reds of either oil or spirit depending on the main climate
where the instrument will be used or on the musician’s
preference.
Instruments made and repaired in my workshop are not
limited to standard instruments or designs: I enjoy
the challenge of the unusual. For example, I was a
co-founder of Bridge Musical Instruments of Sleaford
and was principal designer of a range of electric
violins, celli & double-basses with hollow carbon graphite,
kevlar & epoxy Resin bodies of unusual ergonomic shapes (as can be seen
in the Hindersine rosin advertisements in the Strad magazine and my website).
I have also made Bowl Lyres, David’s Lyres, hurdy-gurdies and other instruments
requested by musicians that don’t conform to any traditional or standard
description other than being a portable stringed musical instrument.
I generally work alone without assistants or apprentices
and pride myself in the manufacture and maintenance of
top-quality, functional musical tools used by working
musicians. |