vintage domestic tubas refinished with similar in-vogue "distressed" finishes as applied to new boutique/pro instruments

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bloke
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vintage domestic tubas refinished with similar in-vogue "distressed" finishes as applied to new boutique/pro instruments

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arpthark (Wed Mar 19, 2025 6:24 am)


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Re: vintage domestic tubas refinished with similar in-vogue "distressed" finishes as applied to new boutique/pro instrum

Post by arpthark »

Can I call the tubas left out in my unheated barn all winter "cryogenically treated"?

And the mouse that hid some grains in a Lyon & Healy body I have -- "organically supplemented"?
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bloke (Wed Mar 19, 2025 8:41 am)
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Re: vintage domestic tubas refinished with similar in-vogue "distressed" finishes as applied to new boutique/pro instrum

Post by MiBrassFS »

I think “F@t B@stard” would look “FIRE” after sum 80 grit… Shiiiiiiiiii…

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bloke (Wed Mar 19, 2025 8:41 am)
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Re: vintage domestic tubas refinished with similar in-vogue "distressed" finishes as applied to new boutique/pro instrum

Post by donn »

There's some visual appeal, to be sure, but it looks like there might be an unappealing tendency to soil the player.

That red patina in the second picture would be interesting if it could be effected more evenly and without the corrosion blooms. It would be interesting to know more about the chemistry of this stuff, why sometimes tubas go red and others go brown.
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bloke
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Re: vintage domestic tubas refinished with similar in-vogue "distressed" finishes as applied to new boutique/pro instrum

Post by bloke »

donn wrote: Thu Mar 20, 2025 12:32 pm There's some visual appeal, to be sure, but it looks like there might be an unappealing tendency to soil the player.

That red patina in the second picture would be interesting if it could be effected more evenly and without the corrosion blooms. It would be interesting to know more about the chemistry of this stuff, why sometimes tubas go red and others go brown.
That's why you're not an "artiste". Were it that you had an artistic flair, it would be dampened by your tendency to be too much of a control freak.

If something looks really horrible and ruins the overall look, artistes go with it, and critics rave. Learn that.
Free yourself of your inhibitions, and someday you may reach the next level.

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Re: vintage domestic tubas refinished with similar in-vogue "distressed" finishes as applied to new boutique/pro instrum

Post by humBell »

There is a next level?
"All art is one." -Hal
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