Cello Luthier

Cello making, restoration and maintenance at the cello shop

Cello luthiers in London

We are specialist cello luthiers, repairing and restoring cellos of all levels and sizes. From small size student cellos to some of the most famous antique cellos in the world.

Below: A cello by Antonio Stradivari, “The Comte de Saveuse, 1726” visiting the Ruschil workshop.

Customers are welcome to contact us using the link below, where we aim to respond to you within the hour:

Work undertaken by our cello luthier specialist:

  • Cello Crack Repair

  • Regluing of Cello Seams

  • Cello Varnish Repair

  • Cello Fingerboard Adjustment

  • New Cello Endpin

  • Cello Soundpost Adjustment

“The King Arthur”

“The King Arthur, 2023” is a cello handmade in the Ruschil & Bailly workshop on our original form. It is a deep, velvety smooth and balanced cello with a confident upper register for a player looking for pure quality.

Model
Ruschil & Bailly workshop

Year
2023

Crafting Harmony: The jobs of a Cello Luthier

The world of a cello luthier is a unique blend of craftsmanship, artistry, and a profound understanding of the nuanced complexities that make each cello a distinct voice in the symphony of classical music. From selecting the finest tonewoods to the delicate adjustments that shape the instrument's sound, the job of a cello luthier is a labour of love that demands skill, precision, and a keen appreciation for the musical journey each instrument is destined to undertake.

**1. Materials Selection and Preparation: The day often begins with the meticulous selection of tonewoods. Cello luthiers carefully examine and handpick premium spruce for the top plate and maple for the back and sides. The chosen wood's grain, density, and resonance potential are all factors considered in creating an instrument of superior quality. Once selected, the luthier begins the process of carving, bending, and shaping the wood to bring the cello to life.

**2. Carving and Shaping: The art of cello making involves intricate carving to achieve the desired arching and thickness of the plates. Using gouges, planes, and scrapers, the luthier meticulously carves the scroll, f-holes, and the delicate contours of the cello's body. Each stroke is calculated to achieve the perfect balance between structural integrity and tonal responsiveness.

**3. Assembly and Graduation: With the plates carved, the cello takes shape through the assembly process. The luthier carefully fits the ribs to the top and back, joining them seamlessly to create the cello's distinctive form. Graduation – the strategic thinning of the plates – becomes a delicate dance, ensuring that the cello resonates with a harmonious blend of warmth, depth, and projection.

**4. Varnishing and Aesthetic Finishing: Varnishing is a critical step that not only protects the wood but also contributes to the cello's aesthetic appeal. Cello luthiers employ an artistic touch in applying varnish, choosing from a palette of colors and finishes to enhance the instrument's visual allure. The varnish also plays a role in influencing the cello's tonal characteristics.

**5. Setup and Adjustments: The final steps involve setting up the cello for optimal playability and sound. Cello luthiers meticulously adjust the bridge, soundpost, and tailpiece, ensuring that each component complements the other in creating a responsive and resonant instrument. This phase often involves collaborative efforts with musicians to fine-tune the cello to their specific preferences.

**6. Repairs and Restorations: Beyond crafting new instruments, cello luthiers are often tasked with the delicate art of repairs and restorations. This can range from addressing cracks, seams, and open joints to regraduating an old instrument to breathe new life into its sound. The luthier's expertise in restoration contributes to the preservation of musical history.

**7. Collaboration with Musicians: A cello luthier's job extends beyond the workshop, involving collaboration with musicians. This may include consultations with cellists to understand their playing style, preferences, and the specific requirements of their repertoire. Such collaboration ensures that the crafted cello becomes an extension of the musician's expression.

**8. Continuous Learning and Innovation: The world of luthiery is dynamic, and a cello luthier is often engaged in continuous learning and innovation. Staying abreast of new materials, techniques, and advancements in the field is essential to refining and advancing the craft. Workshops, conferences, and collaborations with fellow luthiers contribute to the luthier's ongoing education.

In conclusion, the job of a cello luthier is a multifaceted and intricate journey. From the careful selection of materials to the final adjustments that shape the instrument's voice, the luthier's dedication and skill breathe life into each cello. As these instruments find their way into the hands of musicians, the artistry of the cello luthier becomes an integral part of the timeless symphony of classical music.

We make our cello bridges in both the Belgian and French styles to fit your cello perfectly. Every bridge blank is hand-selected for its quality, we only use the very highest standard of seasoned maple.

Having made cello bridges in the thousands for players, we have created the most reliable addition for your instrument.

Every bridge is also guaranteed for life for wear and tear and we are happy to replace it if it doesn’t stand the test of time. Providing it is well cared for, you will only have to buy one bridge for your cello ever again.

Bespoke cello bridges

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Adjusting a fingerboard is one of the jobs one of our expert cello luthiers will do.

This facilitates ease of playing for the cellist, making it effortless to reach the notes in their piece of music.

A full list of the repairs we carry out in the atelier can be found by clicking the button below:

Customers are welcome to contact us using the link below, where we aim to respond to you within the hour:

Domenico Montagnana,

'the mighty Venetian'…

An article on the great cello luthier written by expert John Dilworth


Domenico Montagnana, 'the mighty Venetian'…as he was dubbed by the Edwardian writer Charles Reade, was born in the village of Lendinara close to Venice, in about 1687. He came to the city itself at the very end of the seventeenth century, where he probably entered into an apprenticeship with Matteo Gofriller.

Gofriller was at that time the only significant violin maker in the city, but already very successful and noticeably prolific in the production of cellos. This was of course a line Montagnana was to follow. Gofriller's work is very variable in style, open to many influences, but always showing a very forceful character and a very appealing sense of style. He must have been the perfect master for Domenico.

Another craftsman who probably worked alongside him in the Gofriller workshop was Francesco Gobetti, born in nearby Udine in 1675. A little older than Montagnana, he nevertheless appears to have become his assistant, as Gobetti's often very refined and distinctive handiwork can sometimes be detected in early instruments bearing the Montagnana label, but only relatively rarely appears under his own name. He was obviously not a robust individual, and died in 1723.


Montagnana may have established his own shop as early as 1711, but his earliest instruments date from 1720. It is hard to distinguish a straightforward chronological development of his style, since he adopted various models and patterns throughout his career. It might even be said that the distinguishing features of his work are present from the beginning. Most noticeable and obvious of course is his varnish; a deeply pigmented recipe in the classical tradition, laid on in several coats of oil and resin over a characteristically golden-coloured ground. Usually quite thick and soft, it is very often highly textured with craquelure. This phenomenon is seen in many great makers of the classical period, although it s rare in Stradivari.

In Montagnana, it is fairly extreme, and the varnish seems to have pulled itself apart into tiny islands, sometimes like rubies strewn across a table, but more often it is just a complex pattern of cracks and checks across the varnish surface. It is most likely due to the presence of strong driers in the varnish, which has caused the different coats to dry at different rates, which causes stresses in the finished varnish coat.

It may also have been that Montagnana himself was a little impatient with the application, and laid the varnish on too thickly and too fast.

The result is that the instruments are often very dramatic in appearance, whether the varnish is mostly intact and deep red in colour, or is very textured and patinated. Once the surface has lost its integrity, it becomes very vulnerable to all forms of patina, which integrate themselves into the varnish and become difficult to disperse again. Consequently, Montagnanas often present a very dark appearance which lights up dramatically when intense light strikes the deep pigmentation that has become masked by surface dirt.


His violins follow many forms, including the then fashionable Stainer model, with high, fluted archings, and paddle-shaped soundholes. Other instruments have more conventional Stradivari-like low arches, or Amati-influenced rounded arching, with appropriate soundholes. The wings of the soundholes themselves are rarely fluted, however. Montagnanas scrolls have an improvisatory style to them, with open windings that are not necessarily regular or evenly concentric, but deeply worked and quite striking, with a narrow, unevenly applied chamfer.

A noticeable feature of his cello scrolls it that the chin, in the side aspect, abruptly changes course, and instead of following the predictable curve of the rest of the pegbox, adopts a much flatter curve.

Which brings us to the cellos. Passing from the violins, and the sole known example of a viola made by Montagnana, a fiercely large instrument that was played by Lionel Tertis for some years, the cellos are quite original in concept, and stand as one of the high points of Italian lutherie in the classical period.

Montagnana developed his own model, at a time when cello design was very fluid, and shifting in size and specific proportion from place to place and almost from year to year. Montagnana's cello form is relatively short, but very wide, especially in the centre bouts, and this seems to provide a great volume, and a large vibrating area of wood at the heart of the instrument, resulting in enormous sound.

Valued by many players above the Stradivari cellos of the breat 'B' form, they are almost the 'del Gesu' of cellos, providing the earthy, powerful counterpoint to Stradivari's refined clarity. His instruments are associated with many of the finest cellists, from Gregor Piatigorski to Yo-Yo Ma, Lyn Harrell, Steven Isserlis and Heinrich Schiff in the present day.

He is also credited with at least one exceptional double bass, a magnificent arch-backed instrument dating from his last period, around 1747.

Montagnana died in 1750, but his immediate legacy was limited. His business passed to his son-in-law, Giorgio Serafin, the son of Santo Serafin. Although this may have seemed an ideal confluence of two of the greatest Venetian workshops, in reality Giorgio did not live up to the reputation of his forbears. Although a very able craftsman, his output was limited, and no cellos of his are known. But Montagnana's influence is detectable in the work of lesser Venetian makers such as Domenico Busan and Giacinto Santagiuliana, and Julio Cesare Gigli of Rome. Today, his cellos provide inspiration for a whole new generation of instrument makers, and the 'Montagnana model' is widely used for new cellos, as an alternative to the Stradivari Forma 'B', which served as the almost universal template throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Carving a new cello bridge

A classic tone from the great cellist Daniil Shafran