INSTRUCTION  •  INFORMATION  •  INSPIRATION

SUBSCRIBE & SAVE

Subscribe to Strings and Save!

12 issues $71.88 value

Pay just $19.95

YOUR DAILY NEWS

Newsletters

The Strings newsletter.

Yours Free!

Get the Digital Edition

For PC or tablets.
Available for iPad, Galaxy (Android) & Blackberry

Giveaway from D'Addario & Planet Waves

D'Addario & Planet Waves Giveaway

Strings Partners

Learn to improvise with Christian Howes

FREE 3-day Trial

Learn More

STAY CONNECTED

featured memberPost blogs and video, start and join discussions around your favorite topics, and meet fellow string players at the Strings Community.

Create an online profile

stringslogo_sm_leftnavimages


What do you think
of the new site?

Let us know!

Buying Bows on a Budget

Student? Just living frugally? Here are some tips on finding a good, affordable violin bow

Buying Bows on a Budget

I broke my first bow on Christmas Eve at the age of 15. It fell on its tip and, to my horror, the head snapped off. Until that moment I hadn’t fully realized that the bow was not an accessory but a sort of co-instrument with the violin. Two days later, anxious to begin playing again, I took my great-grandfather’s fiddle to Seattle and made my very first visit to a violin shop. I remember the light filtering through the dusty leaded glass windows, the aging oriental rugs, the racks of cellos, a rack of antlers, an old lute, and other instruments I didn’t recognize. It was an utterly arcane world, and standing at the glass counter with my entire life savings—$62—I realized I had no idea how to go about buying a bow.

Aspiring string players—or their parents—are routinely confronted with the necessity of buying a bow on a budget without enough knowledge to make an informed purchase. A bow can cost anywhere from $50 to tens of thousands and not look all that different to the untrained eye. What’s the difference between a $50 bow and a $150 bow? What can you expect in your price range? What advantages would just a little bit more money buy? What should you look for in a bow? And for that matter, where do you buy a bow?

Ch-ch-ch-changes

The last few years have seen big changes in a traditionally slow-moving trade. Carbon fiber has gained acceptability as an alternative to wood and has recently started coming down in price. The Internet has made good information on bows more accessible and changed the way we shop, while China has emerged as a violin- and bow-making powerhouse. “China has really arrived in the last two or three years,” says Jay Ifshin of Ifshin Violins in El Cerrito, California, noting that quality has increased dramatically. Like a growing number of retailers, Ifshin runs his own workshop in China, training workers and overseeing production of his own models. “Some teachers get hung up on European,” he adds, “but these days Chinese bows are better.”

“It’s a good situation right now for players,” says Todd French, president of StringWorks, a company that designs its own line of instruments and bows. A confluence of conditions currently is working in favor of the consumer, he says, including a low-cost workforce in China and an unfavorable exchange rate with Europe. Quality has increased dramatically, with most work being done by hand rather than machine, while prices have come down. “Who knows how long it will last,” says French, whose designs are made by a workshop in China.

The entry-level bow market can be confusing. Entry-level bows are made of several different materials. Prices vary widely and products are frequently not branded but simply labeled with the name of the retailer—if they are stamped at all. To get oriented, we’ll start with an explanation of materials, a major factor in price and playability, then describe what to expect in different price ranges.

Materials

While fine bows have been made of one wood, called pernambuco, for the last 200 years, bows for the beginner come in a variety of materials. Pernambuco is prized for its beauty, resilience, and ability to draw tone out of an instrument, but it is also expensive and increasingly endangered. A number of less-precious materials are suitable for beginners, who may not be ready to handle the liveliness of pernambuco.

Leon and Ray Glasser invented the fiberglass bow in 1962, ushering in the use of synthetic materials for bow making. Fiberglass is a composite of lightweight plastic reinforced with fine fibers of glass that can then be molded. The resulting bows have a brighter, less complex sound than wood, but have the advantage of being consistent, inexpensive, and virtually indestructible.

Brazilwood is a generic term for hardwoods from Brazil. Pernambuco is a single genus of brazilwood, and it grows only in one place: the endangered Mata Atlantica rainforest on the coast of Brazil. Other brazilwoods grow more widely and make successful student bows. Excellent-quality brazilwood can be as good or better than low-grade pernambuco, according to Richard Ward of Ifshin Violins.

Carbon fiber is a later addition to bow making. Carbon fibers are extremely strong when pulled, but relatively flexible. These fibers can be set in a matrix of resin by various processes to create a composite material that is both strong and flexible. The mix of materials can be controlled to achieve specific results. Carbon-fiber bows vary greatly in price and sophistication, and are typically more expensive than fiberglass or brazilwood, but have recently entered the beginner price range.

The frog, where the hair attaches to the bow, is traditionally made of ebony. Very inexpensive bows sometimes have plastic frogs, while others are made of less expensive hardwoods. Quality of workmanship varies a great deal. Student bows are usually “nickel mounted,” meaning that the metal parts are made of “nickel silver,” an alloy of nickel, copper, and zinc. Frogs are described as “fully lined” if they have metal pieces behind the pearl slide and down the back of the frog. Inexpensive “half-lined” frogs do not have metal behind the slide, resulting in a lighter- weight frog, which could leave the bow feeling tip-heavy.

Bows with poorly made frogs are time consuming or impossible to rehair. Workshops are very busy, so cheap bows are often turned away. (A replacement can often be purchased for $50 or so, about the price of a rehair.) Choose a decent-quality frog unless you plan to consider the bow disposable. Also, some violin shops do not work on instruments or bows they did not sell, so they may refer you to the company that sold it to you—something to consider when shopping. Like the Sears Roebuck catalog of old, online retailers tend to be less expensive and are certainly a blessing to those who live in remote areas. In contrast, brick-and-mortar violin retailers usually maintain a repair shop and priority in the workshop is an unspoken part of the retail price of goods.

Shopping!

Bows interact differently with different instruments, so bring your own violin to find the best match. Even among the least expensive wooden bows there is a great deal of variety. Some will be better than others. Ward suggests playing as many bows as possible. “Don’t get too hung up on a particular price range,” he advises. “Try lots of bows. Come in, try a dozen, take them home for a week, trade them in.”

There is no substitute for trying out bows and instruments with the help of a knowledgeable dealer, teacher, or more experienced friend. Every bow is a little different. Learning to see, feel, and hear increasingly subtle differences in quality is also an important part of the progressing player’s educatio

Dear Visitor,

This article, "Buying Bows on a Budget," is part of the Strings Archive, which you can access with a paid site subscription.

If you have a paid subscription, you are seeing this message because you have not logged in.

What do you want to do?


Log in using my current paid subscription account.

Subscribe now and get our best offer.

Comments: 0
ALL COMMENTS
ARE FULLY MODERATED

You must be logged in to rate and comment.
Log in or Subscribe now.
  • 1

  • 2

SUBSCRIBE AND SAVE

Pay only $1.66 per issue!

That's a savings of 72%

Subscribe to Strings and Save
gift subscriptionArrows

90-DAY FREE ONLINE TRIAL

Get the 'Strings' digital editions and unlimited access to AllThingsStrings.com

FREE FOR 3 MONTHS!

Subscribe to 'Strings' digital

GET IT ALL

Get 'Strings' magazine and unlimited access

to AllThingsStrings.com for 12 months!

Get Strings magazine and unlimited access to AllThingsStrings.com testtest