The bow of the violin is what makes the sound that you are most familiar with as a stringed instrument sound. Violinists put rosin (maple sap) on their bows to help the bow hair (horse hair) get friction on the strings. Hope this was helpful!
A violin, a bow, rosin, a case and a cloth to wipe the rosin off of the strings before you put it away.
There are several things you can put an accent on a note. You can put more pressure on the bow, you can play in lane 3 (close to the bridge), or you can play close to the frog of the bow just to name a few. There are also other ways you can put accents on notes.
Well, I play Violin and you should rub rosin on your bow 2 times and that will be fine.
You basically rub the hairs of the bow onto the rosin. But, the rosin has to be scraped to gab onto the bow hairs. But good rosin does no need to be scraped before using. I one bought a violin that came with a free rosin and I rubbed it on for half an hour and nothing went on. I then bought a more expensive piece of rosin and it worked just fine.
Sticky glue
Sticky glue
duck tape, sticky tack, gum
Actually rosin makes the bow sound good on the instrument but it is sticky
The bow of the violin is what makes the sound that you are most familiar with as a stringed instrument sound. Violinists put rosin (maple sap) on their bows to help the bow hair (horse hair) get friction on the strings. Hope this was helpful!
A violin, a bow, rosin, a case and a cloth to wipe the rosin off of the strings before you put it away.
There are several things you can put an accent on a note. You can put more pressure on the bow, you can play in lane 3 (close to the bridge), or you can play close to the frog of the bow just to name a few. There are also other ways you can put accents on notes.
you put it on the bow not the strings it is called rosin
It has to do with the loudness of the sound. You can control that by the weight you put on the bow when you play.
Well, I play Violin and you should rub rosin on your bow 2 times and that will be fine.
To produce sound from the violin, you place the bow and move it back and forth across one string. To change the note played on the violin, you place your fingers on different parts of the string. To control the volume, you can put more pressure on the bow making the sound louder, or putting less pressure to soften the volume.
You basically rub the hairs of the bow onto the rosin. But, the rosin has to be scraped to gab onto the bow hairs. But good rosin does no need to be scraped before using. I one bought a violin that came with a free rosin and I rubbed it on for half an hour and nothing went on. I then bought a more expensive piece of rosin and it worked just fine.