Cremona SV-225 Premier Student Violin

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Cremona SV-225 Premier Student Violin, Full-Size You’ve seen this finish before on fine, old violins costing thousands of dollars and often in the hands of professional players or collectors. And until now, an instrument of this look and quality has never been available at such an affordable price point! The SV-225 is a fully hand carved violin made of select spruce and flamed maple, shaded in a beautiful antique finish. Each instrument comes as an outfit with a high-quality, J. La Salle bow and a Superior hard-shell case for optimal protection. Hand-carved solid Spruce top Hand-carved solid flamed Maple back sides neck and scroll Inlaid purfling A beautiful antiqued German brown finish; comes equipped with top-quality D’addario Prelude strings Ebony fingerboard Polished ebony fittings VP-203 Cremona 3-star bridge (4) built-in finetuners New LB-15 octagonal Brazilwood bow with genuine unbleached white horsehair New Travelite TL-33 light-weight and durable rectangular violin case with built-in hygrometer Shop adjusted

List Price: $ 369.95 Current Price: $ 229.99 Customer Reviews

42 of 45 people found the following review helpful What a great violin!, September 17, 2010

By

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R. Seehoffer “Author” (Mesa, AZ) – See all my reviews

Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?) This review is from: Cremona SV-225 Premier Student Violin, Full-Size (Electronics) Well, I ordered the Cremona SV-225 violin on Sept. 16th, and I received it on the 18th and am looking at the tuned instrument as I write this. I bought this brand and model based on numerous written and video reviews over the last month or so. I wanted a decent quality, student violin for 200-300 dollars, that would serve me without frustration until and if I get good enough to upgrade. The Cremona cost me $206.00 shipped. I am not a violinist (YET), my instrument of choice to this point being the piano. But, that said, I do know quality when I see it, and when I hear it.The violin came UPS, adequately packed in a large and undamaged box. (No offense, UPS, but this has to be a first…) Under the paper packing was a light but substantial hard shell case. Inside was the violin and bow, a compartment containing rosin and a shoulder strap for the case, and the violin bridge, wrapped in foam and stuck under the tailpiece. The case had a built-in hygrometer for humidity that actually seemed to read accurately. So far, so good. I soon discovered that this is really a very nice violin, on many levels. In appearance, it is stained a pleasing reddish brown, with a satin varnish that does not easily show fingerprints. The spruce top is very tight grained, and appears to be one piece. The back is two piece maple with a very attractive and visible flame pattern. The neck/peg box/scroll also have a nice pattern and compliment the instrument. The pegs, chin rest, end button and the bow frog are all apparently ebony of decent quality, and the tailpiece with its 4 fine tuners seems to be some sort of composite plastic. The f-holes are cleanly cut. Time to install the bridge. There are no instructions, but there are a million websites showing this. The strings need to be loosened some, and the bridge carefully stood up under the strings. The flat back of the bridge labeled ‘Cremona’ faces the tailpiece, and the edges of the bridge are lined up with the inside notches cut into the f-holes. The back should wind up perfectly vertical with the strings placed in the four small notches along the top. The lowest height part of the bridge is under the E-string. Also, there is a tiny piece of tubing about a 1/4? long slipped over the E-string, and this needs to rest over the top of the bridge notch to protect the bridge from the thin E-string. Tuning is done gradually, in stages back and forth between all strings. It is important to check the vertical alignment of the bridge frequently, as tuning will pull it forward and so the top must be carefully slid back to vertical until the tuning is complete. I used my piano to tune the violin, based on a Google Images diagram. GDAE, with the D being 1 white key above middle C. If

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unsure, read. I opened the rosin and scratched the surface several times using the edge of the bow adjusting screw. I then tensioned the bow, and dragged it across the rosin for quite some time. NEVER touch the bow hair with your bare fingers while doing this or any other time; the oil from your skin will ruin the ‘bite’ of the hair and you won’t get a sound. The strings will stretch for a day, and so need adjusted several times, especially the first hour or so. Once I had the instrument decently tuned I played a number of open notes on 1 or 2 strings, and the sound was really surprising–at least to me. I’ve never touched a violin before, and thought for sure I’d be screeching and bouncing and waking the dead. What came out was a clear, bright, loud, and most pleasant sound. I was amazed! This little wooden box actually sounded great! And, I hadn’t broken a string, the bow, the bridge, or my wallet in the process. Along with the violin, I ordered extra Helicore strings, some ‘peg drops’ (based on a number of people’s recommendations), a different bridge, a fingering chart, and higher quality rosin. What can I say; I like to be prepared. So, that’s where I’m at. I may never be a virtuoso, but I think this thing and I will wind up being good friends. Next–lessons!!

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3/6


14 of 16 people found the following review helpful cremona sv 225 is great!, July 30, 2011

By sergio del angel – See all my reviews

Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?) This review is from: Cremona SV-225 Premier Student Violin, Full-Size (Electronics) I decided to buy this fiddle for my beguinner little daughter. so I didn’t know what to choose: cremona, palatino, vif, stagg and others.My choice was cremona because of many reviews I saw.Ok now I can feedback and:1) the violin is beautiful,great antique finish.2)the case worths a lot by itself.really elegant and nice outfit. 3)the strings are terrible. this is the point the cremona makers should pay attention to. the only strings sound is the worst i’ve ever heard in a violin. I noticed the strings are too tigth and hard to press. 4) Every customer can fix that point buying a brand new set of fine strings like pirastro or d’addario.(violin players must send your outfits to adjust the bridge with some luthier. i’ts absolutly necessary. believe me) 5) I recommend this violin for beguinners but gotta take my points. 6) deliverying was rigth at the time. not before not after.6) the bow that i received is just a piece of wood. hair does not adjust. i’m sending it back. Ok I hope my review really helps for some of you. good luck.

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4/6


11 of 13 people found the following review helpful Nice violin, for starters [and the price], January 10, 2011

By BuyLess (CA, USA) – See all my reviews

Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?) This review is from: Cremona SV-225 Premier Student Violin, Full-Size (Electronics) My level of experience: I played violin when I was a little kid and I would have been close to the advanced beginner/entry-level intermediate stage, and I wanted to get back and see how I would do as an adult.I bought this after visiting local stores who tried to intimidate you by saying, “You will get glued wood blocks online!”, and showing entry level violins that at-least cost half a grand. Well, yes, I’m sure I got one, but, the good thing is, it actually played like a violin. Decent sound, something for you to try out before you decide to get serious. To make things clear, this is definitely an entry-level violin, so, don’t expect magic out of it. There are going to be rough edges, but this is a nice price point at which you can get started and see if you get enough interest to continue. The bad: Stock strings are really *bad*. I broke my E string while attempting to set it up, and then my A string got unwound near the groove (it could also be my fault). Either way, it does seem like the strings don’t sound good. I would suggest upgrading to a nicer set of strings. Bridge cut may not be perfect. But then, you can always replace it after a while. Pegs could be a little problem; just push it in while tightening and it should hold up. At this price level, you can expect some quality control issues, so YMMV may vary. P.S: When you get your instrument, attempt to make sure it has all required parts (i.e., I got shipped one without a sound-post from a different retailer).

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