🎶 Elevate Your Sound with the Original Dampit!
The Original Dampit Violin Humidifier is a trusted solution for maintaining optimal humidity levels in your violin, ensuring its longevity and sound quality. Made from high-quality materials, this easy-to-use humidifier has been protecting wood instruments since 1966, making it an essential accessory for every serious musician.
S**L
A MUST HAVE
If you live in a climate that gives you winter, you HAVE to have this thing. It keeps your instrument humidified and therefore keeps the body from cracking in the dry winter months. Do not listen to those who tremble with fear over putting water inside the instrument. FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS provided with the Dampit. You soak it in water and then squeeze out the excess so it is not dripping and dry off the outside. Then shove it in the F hole. It will save your violin.
L**A
Great price
This is just what I needed for my violin. My previous dampit was 30 years old and cracking, this came and was just like my previous one. Easy to use and much needed for the dry house I live in. This should help my violin.
G**Y
Violin hmidifier
Here in Maine the house gets very dry during the winter months. I use one of these on my three violins to maintain the critical humidity when I store the violin in its case.
J**4
Superior Quality
I am a viola/violin collector and I've been using Dampit and similar products for a while. I tried other alternatives to Dampit (as they are hard to find sometimes!), but there is no comparison - Dampit is the best value for money, better quality that will last, and works superior compared to other similar products. I also use it on my acoustic guitars and ukeleles. I currently have about a dozen Dampits and I switch them around in my collection.
A**.
A nice device but somewhat difficult to insert into my violin
Air humidity is very low in my house. I'm happy to have something that protects my violin from low humidity. The only complaint is that the first part of the tube close to the tip is a bit rigid and very straight. The tip of Dampit does not slide on the violin's back easily, which makes it difficult to pass the point when the tip of Dampit just touched violin's back. If I keep pushing the tube into the violin, the tube eventually bends and starts to slide inside the violin.
S**.
I think it works.
Recommended by violin instructor. I don’t know if people can actually tell if it works correctly because I guess violin would have to “go bad” to know it didn’t. Kinda funny.
D**Y
Usually only needed in dry climates (like New England in the winter!)
It is important to keep the wood of a violin humidified so it won't crack. During humid months using a humidifier isn't necessary but once the dry winter months come (starting in early Fall and continuing into mid-Spring) it's important to have one of these devices and to remember to keep it damp. It also helps to have a reliably accurate humidity guage in the case and in the room where the instruments are usually stored and played.
T**I
Old standby
These are the old standby for keeping the interior of your instrument humidified. I live in a very dry part of the country, and have looked into room as well as instrument humidifiers to keep my instruments happy. Since I haven't found the perfect room humidifier for my needs yet, and other instrument humidifiers are kind of fussy or weird, I went with Dampit again. Dampits have stood the test of time for me for thirty years. They're inexpensive and effective. Yes, they need checking and maintenance, but with good water and proper use they will last for years.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
4 days ago