Spyke
3dprinting·3DPrintingbymortalic

I 3d printed the ukulele from instructables and wrote about it

Recently my daughter has started getting into playing the ukulele, I ran across the instructables post and it seemed like a pretty straightforward project, so I went for it. Video of it playing (terribly) in the substack post. I hope you all enjoy the read.

Link to the article

View original on lemmy.world
feddit.de

Cool stuff, but seriously consider getting your daughter a decent wooden one if she keeps being interested. They don't have to cost hundreds of dollars but something around $50 will give you a decent beginners instrument. From my experience plastic ukuleles sound terrible and are somehow not as easy to play.

8

Thank you, she does have a pretty decent one, this project was mostly just for fun and now she can choose between a pretty one and a normal one.

12
mortalicreply
lemmy.world

That was my thoughts. It's got a little twangy to it, and if you play it next to a normal uke there is a definite difference, but for what it is, I was really happy.

6

Thanks for sharing the resource! The documentation people like you share is very helpful in making these projects less daunting

4
lemmy.world

I have a plastic backed one with a wood front that has solid tone so I imagine this could work

after reading and listening to the result it sounds better than the wood type that tourists buy on the cheap

2

Good point, it def splits the difference between tourist uke and quality uke. ANd at $34 you can't hardly argue.

2

You reached the end

I 3d printed the ukulele from instructables and wrote about it | Spyke