Bosnian maple is a type of Acer platanoides, a European mountain maple indigenous to former Yugoslavia. It was a very high grade of maple, very light and very strong, according to some the best wood in the world for making violins,[1] as it had the finest resonance.[2] The classic Italian violin makers probably used wood from Tyrol, or northern Yugoslavia, or Switzerland.[3] The maple has mostly been used for the back plates.[4] It was used by the Gagliano family of luthiers. Portuguese violin maker António Capela uses the Yugoslavian spruce and maple.[2]
References
- ↑ The Roadshow Archive, Gagliano Family Violin & François Nicolas Voirin Bow, ca. 1800: "... made of Yugoslavian maple. This is a very high grade of maple, very light and very strong, the best violin-making wood in the world.
- 1 2 Evans 2004, p. 179: "Antonio travels to Italy and Germany to select Yugoslavian spruce or the more beautiful maple, the woods with the finest resonance."
- ↑ Harvey 1995, p. 52: "The table wood of the classic Italian makers probably came from the Tyrol or what became northern Yugoslavia or Switzerland ..."
- ↑ Strings, Volume 10, p. 26: "From aged Yugoslavian maple come some of the finest back plates"
Sources
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