what you need:cardboard: box knife: fishing line: sharpie: hot glue gun and a few dowels.
first take the cardboard and the sharpie and make a outline of a violin its easyer to look at a picture to kind of get a idea of the shape then take the box knife and cut it out then repeat three or four times then glue them together then take some more cardboard and make a square the width of the middle of the violin and glue it down then take a dowel and put it on the bodom of the violen and glue it. Now take the fishing line cut three even pieces and glue it to one end then the other. Finale the last step take another dowel and put a strip of velt on the sid that you will use on the strings and glue it down this will be your bow you use it to make the music and thats how you make a cardboard violin.
You can't.
It sounds like an instrument. It plays notes. It's a violin. Go look at violin solos.
The strings that are on the guitar make the sound play. If you think about it, almost every instrument something vibrates to make a sound. In a saxophone, when you blow into the mouthpiece, it makes the reed move. When you hit a violin, it causes the string to move.
it usually depends on the violin in question, but the violin can make a multitude of sounds ranging from melodic, to lively fiddle music, to even rock.
with a violin, horse hair, and a bit of talent
You can't.
The bow makes the strings vibrate, causing the string to make sound.
when they hump and the guy has an orgasm Like a violin, there back legs stick and slide, when it slides it makes the sound.
It depends on your electric violin. A hollow-body violin with an acoustic pickup (basically, a traditional violin with a microphone built into it) will make sound just like a standard acoustic violin. A solid-body electric violin will make sound without an amp...but unless you're the violin player, you won't hear it.
It sounds like an instrument. It plays notes. It's a violin. Go look at violin solos.
The violin doesn't, the violinist makes the music.
Put your first finger on the G string (very left). That is the lowest A sound for the violin.
You can attach a microphone to it and amplify the sound.
because its smaller and short
The strings that are on the guitar make the sound play. If you think about it, almost every instrument something vibrates to make a sound. In a saxophone, when you blow into the mouthpiece, it makes the reed move. When you hit a violin, it causes the string to move.
it usually depends on the violin in question, but the violin can make a multitude of sounds ranging from melodic, to lively fiddle music, to even rock.
with a violin, horse hair, and a bit of talent