Parlor Guitar

how do i identify a vintage parlor guitar with no marking on it?
only visable marking inside is the no. 1730 no actual name on it in its day was a fancy guitar inlay on neck andbody
Try going through any of the vintage guitar books till you find the same one. Try going to a vintage guitar website and searching on the number or looking through the pictures. Take it to a guitar restorer and maybe they’ll have some information.
|
|
Rural Parlor Guitar: Recording From 1967-71 $11.12 … |
|
|
Superimpose $17.49 … |
|
|
American Music for Two Guitars $14.95 In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, St. Louis born guitarist William Foden was the leading and foremost American guitar virtuoso. In addition to hundreds of solo and duo compositions for guitar, and arrangements of lighter classics from composers such as Mendelssohn and Boccherini, Foden contributed original pieces written for the mandolin, mandolin orchestra, banjo and Hawaiian guitar. Whe… |
|
|
Parlor Guitar: Ten Songs Arranged for Solo Guitar in Standard Notation and Tablature (Guitar Solo) $9.66 Arrangements of 10 classic standards complete with demos on CD. Songs include: Alexander’s Ragtime Band * The Glow Worm * Paper Doll * Swanee * Tiger Rag (Hold That Tiger) * and more…. |
|
|
Mel Bay’s Parlor Gems: A Treasury of 19th Century Music for Classic Guitar $14.99 This classical guitar project, for solo and duo, is presented in standard notation. The music has been selected from the vast repertoire of 19th Century parlor music from the United States and Europe. The music is presented to be performed instrumentally; however some lyrics are provided in the introductory notes. A companion recording is included…. |
|
|
Manufacturing guitars for the American parlor: James Ashborn’s Wolcottville, Connecticut, factory, 1851-56 … |