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Reddit mentions of Mendini Solid Wood Violin with Hard Case, Bow, Rosin and Extra Strings (4/4, Antique)

Sentiment score: 4
Reddit mentions: 6

We found 6 Reddit mentions of Mendini Solid Wood Violin with Hard Case, Bow, Rosin and Extra Strings (4/4, Antique). Here are the top ones.

Mendini Solid Wood Violin with Hard Case, Bow, Rosin and Extra Strings (4/4, Antique) #2
    Features:
  • Music Instruments For Kids & Adults: This fiddle kit is a great beginner violin for any student, young or old. This set includes all the necessities to start learning how to play.
  • Elegant Design: As beautiful as most band & orchestra musical instruments for kids, this ebony violin has a solid wood hand-carved spruce top; maple back, neck and sides with a beautiful finish; and an alloy tailpiece with 4 built-in fine tuners.
  • Starter Violin Kit Includes: Available in several sizes the kit also has 1 bow, extra violin strings, a quality rosin, adjustable shoulder rest with padding and rubber feet, and lightweight hard case with straps.
  • The Right Size: The violin for kids and adults comes in 8 sizes. To measure which size violin is best, measure from the neck to the middle of your left-hand palm (as if holding an invisible violin in straight outstretched arm). Consult table below.
  • Handle With Care: Like any fiddle instrument, this student violin is delicate. Please note the bridge will not be setup to avoid damage during shipping. NOTE: Tuning pegs must be handled with care and pushed in when adjusting.
Specs:
ColorAntique
Height12 Inches
Length32 Inches
Number of items1
Size4/4
Weight2.26796 Kilograms
Width5 Inches
#1 of 164

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Found 6 comments on Mendini Solid Wood Violin with Hard Case, Bow, Rosin and Extra Strings (4/4, Antique):

u/Scuderia · 6 pointsr/skeptic

I'm guessing the "new violins" they used were probably of high quality and not some cheap $70 violin Mendini.

u/AdoptedTargaryen · 2 pointsr/violinist

I ordered a 2014 Mendini from Amazon today! It should be arriving this week and then I'm going to start lessons within the month. I'm really excited after wanting to learn all these years to finally have the wheels in motion :)

u/Count_Hater · 2 pointsr/Gamingcirclejerk

I have been looking through Amazon


This one looks pretty good and the reviews are mostly positive. It's a shame it doesn't ship to my country.

u/TayloShoes · -1 pointsr/violinist

Hey Hayabusa, good on you for being so supportive of your friend and his hobbies. u/leitmotifs isn't far off in estimation of the prices, and if your friend is super-serious about this, then that's the route he should probably go. That being said, I also had a buddy who decided he wanted to pick up violin as a new hobby, and who didn't have $700+ to spend on an instrument. What he did instead was get this guy.

I'll be straight with you: with some qualifiers, as far as he was concerned, it was a good fit for him. Qualifiers: it didn't take him long to figure out he needed a different shoulder rest and better strings, and the action is a little high. It's not as nice as a full-price instrument. But he's been playing for a while now and (while I imagine that if he keeps it up over the years, he'll need to upgrade to a much nicer instrument), it's worked pretty well. Not gonna lie, if what you're looking for is a serviceable violin-shaped object that doesn't cost much so that your buddy can figure out if this is a hobby he wants to pursue, this seems to be a decent way to go about it.

Disclaimer: Generally speaking, buying an instrument at so low a price point is not a great idea, BUT I wouldn't have recommended this violin without having seen and heard the model in action myself. And you don't have to listen to just me, this is a review of the exact violin I linked you to by a British lady named Alison Sparrow who runs a YouTube channel that is all about learning to play violin and piano.

Whatever you decide, good luck to you and your friend!

(Edited for phrasing/clarity and stuff.)

u/malilla · -5 pointsr/violinist

You don't need an expensive violin for beginners. Anything from $100 or $150 is just fine if you want to learn from zero. Don't be afraid that the violin itself will sound worse, any good violinist can make a cheap violin sound decently fine.

I'd recommend you to start with these cheap factory-made violins and if you really like it playing after a year or so then you can start looking for better hand-made violins.