Most of us aren t wood experts so what exactly do different woods have to do with the sound of an acoustic guitar.
Cherry wood acoustic guitar.
Rosewood is a very popular wood for guitars and has been used a lot traditionally too.
Im looking to either do a v or an ml shaped guitar.
That was for the cherry seven project at the montreal guitar festival a couple of years ago.
My brother recently bought a house and there is a huge cherry tree i will be helping taking out.
Random1643 davidp and doug 54 like this.
I ve used it for both classical and steel string guitars as well as fiddles and lots of dulcimers.
It has great mid range like mahogany but also expands well into the high end tones and low end tones producing deep bass notes and bright treble notes.
Cherry creme guitar cherry wood with creme binding light as a feather sounds godlike.
Very few companies are making guitars with cherry i think the reason is because the cost of cherry is quite high and it does not look as flashy as some other woods out there.
Not as transparent as maple or as dark as walnut.
Crafted entirely f rom fsc certified woods including a sitka spruce top cherry back and sides a mahogany high performance neck ebony fingerboard and bridge and an african blackwood headplate the ome cherry is martin s newest fsc guitar the model includes gold open gear tuners and arrives stage ready with fishman matrix vt enhance electronics so you can rock out and sound as.
Very different to maple rosewood has a high response rate.
As far as cherry being a good tonewood it does serve a purpose.
I know godin uses wild cherry for their acoustic guitars under the art and lutherie label but otherwise i haven t heard much about cherry.
I d put the tone somewhere in the range of maple and walnut.
These a l guitars are made entirely out of the cherry all laminates and still sound amazing for what they are.
I was just curious to know if cherry wood would be good use for a guitar body.
Cherry is a great wood.
He provided cherry for the b s and necks red spruce for tops and hornbeam for fingerboards and.
A great deal actually.
Quebec luthier marc saumier gets all of his wood locally and thought it might be fun to get a group of us to make guitars from the same batch of wood.