it is about 13 inches.
Violin case- stores the violin for travel violin stand- displays a violin
It is used on a violin, it is a price of rubber which sits on the bridge in-between the a and d string.
The bridge of a violin does the same thing as the bridges of most other stringed instruments, including the piano, guitar, uke, bass, harpsicord, crwd, etc. It raises the strings from the soundboard or resonating chamber, and it also transfers the vibrating energy of the string to the soundboard or resonating chamber. In the case of bowed instruments like the violin, it also places the strings along an arc (the upper edge of the bridge) so that they are not co-planar. If they were co-planar, you could never get the bow to make one string resonate while leaving the others untouched.
Yes you can. Essentially the only difference between a fiddle and a violin is that the fiddle has a slightly flatter bridge for the heightened ability to hit multiple strings at once.
No absolutely not the bridge is what transfers the vibrations of the strings into the hollow inside of the violin resonating the sound, if you were to play it without the bridge it would sound similar to an electric guitar without an amp.
13
Violin case- stores the violin for travel violin stand- displays a violin
It is used on a violin, it is a price of rubber which sits on the bridge in-between the a and d string.
The bridge of a violin does the same thing as the bridges of most other stringed instruments, including the piano, guitar, uke, bass, harpsicord, crwd, etc. It raises the strings from the soundboard or resonating chamber, and it also transfers the vibrating energy of the string to the soundboard or resonating chamber. In the case of bowed instruments like the violin, it also places the strings along an arc (the upper edge of the bridge) so that they are not co-planar. If they were co-planar, you could never get the bow to make one string resonate while leaving the others untouched.
On the Bridge
Yes you can. Essentially the only difference between a fiddle and a violin is that the fiddle has a slightly flatter bridge for the heightened ability to hit multiple strings at once.
Violin
The Bridge
No absolutely not the bridge is what transfers the vibrations of the strings into the hollow inside of the violin resonating the sound, if you were to play it without the bridge it would sound similar to an electric guitar without an amp.
If your bridge breaks, take it to a repair shop.
Parts of a violin include: the scroll, the bridge, the finger board, the fine tune, the strings ( For violin E A D G) and i am sure the chin rest counts.
A violin is probably the length from your middle finger to your elbow, held erect, but it depends on the size.