Banjo 1. The rim and head are in the background. The jig is to the right. I'm working on the ring in the foreground.
This banjo was purchased in 1896 by the current owner’s grandfather. It is handmade and homemade, though that is all that is known of its origins.
When I received it for repair, it was without a head, bridge, tension ring, hold-down hooks, or strings. The neck was warped, rendering the instrument unplayable.
Repairs were mainly cosmetic, as the banjo would be used only for historic display.
The hooks, head, bridge, and strings were readily available, but the appropriate tension ring was not. I handmade a tension ring by first using a lathe to turn a forming jig of the correct size and then laminating the ring using Hard Maple veneer and epoxy.
The ring was then ready to be beveled (to properly engage the hooks), painted, and the banjo re-assembled.
This is one of those pieces that are a rare pleasure to repair because of its history (known and unknown). Every element that my hand touches has a story. There are few things I enjoy more than imagining what those stories might be.
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