Basically a bow is a long stick. At each end, there is a piece of wood or other material which goes out a short distance from the stick at right angles to it. It holds strings or other material or at least that is what it looks like. They all have technical names.
Beginners bows may use nylon or some other material. A professional uses Siberian horse hair. A professional frequently takes a substance in his hand and runs it up and down on his bow. That is rosin. It keeps his instrument from making a screeching sound. You will hear beginners screech as they play. Professionals do not make that sound.
The violin, the smallest of the string instruments, has the longest bow.
The bow. The hair (the part that touches the string) on the bow is made of horse hair. Be careful not to touch it or you will stain it.
A violin produces sound by the vibration of the bow on the string, or the vibration when you pluck a string.
Using the bow or plucking the string.
False. The bow hair can be horsehair but the strings are not.
Strike the string of the violin with the wooden part of the bow.
The bow. The hair (the part that touches the string) on the bow is made of horse hair. Be careful not to touch it or you will stain it.
A violin produces sound by the vibration of the bow on the string, or the vibration when you pluck a string.
It vibrates the string by pulling it across the string. The hair on the bow has rosin applied to it making it sticky.
Using the bow or plucking the string.
False. The bow hair can be horsehair but the strings are not.
Strike the string of the violin with the wooden part of the bow.
When you pull the bow over the string(s) the hairs on the bow cause the string(s) to vibrate and send the sond to the body of the violin, where it is ampilfyed and sent out the "f-holes"
It vibrates the string by pulling it across the string. The hair on the bow has rosin applied to it making it sticky.
I don't know what it was first made of, but the violin bow is mostly commonly made out of pernambuco wood throughout most of it's history. This wood is popular for making bows because it is flexible and "bouncy".
When the bow is rubbed against the strings, microscopic hairs on the hair of the bow create immense friction with the string. This causes the string to vibrate rapidly. The vibrating string, in turn, causes the violin to vibrate.
The string makes the sound post vibrate, therefore the sound comes out the f-holes, which are on both sides of the violin.
Yes, in Finland, Troka refers to the hair of a horse's tail used to make the "string" of a violin bow.