🎼 Unleash Your Inner Virtuoso!
The Cremona SV-100 Premier Novice Violin Outfit is a meticulously crafted 1/4 size violin designed for young learners. It features high-quality US-made Prelude strings, rosewood fittings, and a lightweight construction that promotes ease of play and comfort. Ideal for students, this violin ensures precision tuning and expert craftsmanship, making it the perfect choice for aspiring musicians.
P**I
a fine little fiddle for tiny tots
The little violin arrived promptly and in good order. The bridge was down, but it was intentionally packed that way. The sound post was still in place (usually it will be), so it was easy to set the bridge properly and tune the strings. (If the sound post is fallen, this is not a serious problem, but don't try to set it yourself, bring it to a violin repair professional.) The pegs worked well. One cannot expect a great tone from such a tiny instrument, but it is a real, playable violin. I have replaced the tinny Chinese strings with Pirastro's and that improves the sound and volume. No fine tuners were provided with the fiddle so I bought a set of Suzuki tuners from another source (they are very inexpensive) and put them on when I changed the strings. The violin came with a good case, and the bracket inside holds the bow securely. I had only one problem, and that was with the bow. I rosined it for weeks and it simply would not hold rosin. This meant that it could not grip the strings properly but would slide around and produce only a faint tone. I thought maybe the bowhair was some sort of inferior synthetic; however, when I brought it to my local violin repairman, he assured me it was genuine horsehair, but quite dirty. On that basis, I think I understand what happened, and I will explain it because this problem is likely to be encountered by other parents. Whether a bow is big or small, new bowhair never holds to the string. It needs rosin, and at the start, lots of it. A repair shop always has powdered rosin on hand, and when run through it, new hair quickly becomes fit for use. But at home you will likely have only a cake of rosin. In fact, the little violin comes with a cake of rosin. When you first open it, take a nail or a pin or an unbent paper clip and scratch the surface of the rosin with about 10 lines, then rosin the bow a lot until it will grip the strings securely. My mistake was that although I did rosin the bow quite a bit at first, it was not enough, and then another factor took over: to understand this, I need to cite another rule, which is that one should never touch the bow hair, because the oil from the skin makes it slip. Well, try explaining this to a very young child. My daughter would frequently pick up the bow by the hair. Perhaps if there had more rosin on it in the first place, the effect of this might not have been quite so severe. But the combination of not enough rosin and the child continually handling the hair had such a bad effect that it would not hold more rosin. Clearly this is not the fault of the Cremona Company. I don't know if there is a perfect solution, but I suppose the best you can do is (a) make sure the bow is thoroughly rosined before the child ever tries it; and (b) always place the bow in the child's hand at the frog (bow grip), rather than letting her pick it up herself -- to the extent possible, and watch her like a hawk. Another problem you are likely to encounter with a tiny violin is that the G string (the lowest string) is likely to "wow" (rapid fluctuation in pitch) as much as one full tone whenever you draw the bow across it. This is a physical/acoustical problem, even with strings specifically made for this size violin, and quite disconcerting. My replacements for the original Chinese strings were Pirastro "Piranito" for the upper three, and "Chromcor" for the G. The upper strings now sounded louder and better, but the G still had the bad fluctuation. I have since discovered that Pirastro now makes the "new formula" Tonica strings in 1/16-1/32 size, and I have reason to think they have tried to address this problem. I will report back when I've had a chance to try them.
M**A
A good purchase
Bought this for my 4.5 yr old as he has just started going to violin classes.According to his instructor, this is a very good Violin for the beginners.The case and the violin look great. Comes untuned though, so it needs to be setup. in our case, the instructor tuned it. Does not contain a shoulder rest.overall a good product to start learning.
C**R
Cremona - good sound, good quality
We purchased this violin as second instrument to keep it in school. It was ridiculously cheap. Made in China. It came absolutely complete - with case, bow, strings, bridge and rosin. Very good quality of everything, very lightweight and compact, which is important too. It required assembly and tuning, like any other instrument. No booklet with instructions. Sorry, this is not a bookshelf. When it was assembled and tuned by professional, it appears that it has good sound, almost as good as expensive one. In my opinion, this violin is good enough for beginners or students who already play violin and experienced enough so they would not blame violin if they hear wrong sound. Of course, it requires tuning before each lesson.
M**N
2 Year Old Learning (Updated: Almost 4)
Updated:My daughter will be four in two months and will have her first recital with this violin during the same month. I'm really impressed with how long it's lasted and I've had no issues despite it being dropped a couple of times (not bad considering she has a little brother) and one time she shoved down on the bridge to "tuck in" her violin into the case. Little bro will be starting pretty soon and using this violin.I bought this for my daughter to start her Suzuki violin lessons. I think it's great for a two year old. I was a little worried about spending this much money on something she'll outgrow quickly, but I have at least 2 more children that will use it (if it survives everyone's toddler years). It stays in tune pretty well after the initial frustration... Which I've found to happen with full size violins, anyway. It sounds good, too, as far as I can tell from the screeches emanating from it. (We all killed Mary's little lamb at first, didn't we? Or, in my daughter's case, the "little star" went supernova.) I really wasn't expecting much for the size and price, but I'm very pleased.
K**J
rip-off
Buyer beware! It took me a little while to notice that the end button on ours is off-center, which is why the bridge keeps sliding left of center. Still works ok for a small four year old who just plays twinkles quietly anyway, and will soon size into a larger instrument. Poor workmanship though, especially given that this one is more than twice the price of the Mendini, which we had gotten for a big sister a few years ago and had no obvious flaws (I just accidentally knelt on the scroll one day, so now you can only put two strings on it). I still have the Mendini around for comparison to the Cremona SV-100, and the sound on the two tiny instruments is equivalent, the Mendini might even be a little better, even with a broken scroll.
E**A
Great quality for the price; no need to go more expensive
This is a great beginner violin. The kit is absolutely adorable, and comes with everything you'd expect for a bigger sized violin - even a little case strap. I understand the need for a good sounding violin when you first start, but there is not need to buy a more expensive starter kit. My boys love their violin, and it makes a decent enough sound for the year they will be using it.
T**D
Great value
I was nervous about purchasing a violin online for my 8 year-old son, but in the end, he loves it and it actually is BETTER than the one he learned with at school. The tuning pegs hold their tension better (a big problem with the learner violin we rented) and it actually sounds rather good; very warm sounding and proper intonation; much better than expected for the price. This purchase makes me question the merits of renting in the future.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
3 weeks ago