Violin strings were really made of gut, I believe it was really from sheep.The draw back of that type is they were greatly effected by weather and they broke easier.
The bow hair was made from horse tail- a lot better than synthetic bow hair.
Mike R tells just how it was made.
2006-11-06 01:31:49
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answer #1
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answered by KaeMae 4
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Catgut Guitar Strings
2016-11-12 04:08:52
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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"Violin strings are made from a variety of materials, such as various types of steel, nylon, silk, perlon and real animal gut wrapped in aluminum or silver or even gold. The gut strings are often referred to as "cat gut" but are in fact made from the intestines of sheep. A string made from real cat guts would be much too short and weak for use on bowed instruments."
Hope that helps!
2006-11-05 11:02:43
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answer #3
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answered by love2travel 7
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Cat Gut is actually made from sheep intestines
2006-11-05 11:01:04
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answer #4
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answered by chris_morganuk 3
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CAT gut?
I don't think so.
But they WERE once made of animal material:
Catgut is the name applied to cord of great toughness and tenacity prepared from the intestines of sheep/goat, or occasionally from those of the hog, horse, mule, and donkey. Those of the cat are not employed, and therefore it is supposed that the word is properly kitgut ("violin string"), kit meaning "fiddle," and that the present form has arisen through confusion with kit = cat. Another explanation of the origin of the cat in catgut is that it is an abbreviation for cattle which originally denoted not only cows, but all types of livestock.
The substance is used for the strings of harps, violins, and viols, as well as other stringed musical instruments, for hanging the weights of clocks, for bow-strings, and for suturing wounds in surgery. Catgut was also regularly used for stringing racquets in the past, though its use has diminished now with only one company, Babolat, continuing to use it in tennis raquets.
To prepare it, the intestines are cleaned, freed from fat, and steeped for some time in water, after which their external membrane is scraped off with a blunt knife. They are then steeped for some time in an alkaline lye, smoothed and equalized by drawing out, subjected to the antiseptic action of the fumes of burning sulphur, if necessary dyed, sorted into sizes, and twisted together into cords of various numbers of strands according to their uses. The best strings for musical instruments are reputedly from Italy ("Roman strings"); and it is found that lean and ill-fed animals yield the toughest gut.
Though catgut was in use for producing strings for many centuries and the Muslim physician al-Zahrawi utilized it in the 10th century, its use in the medical field became popular in the West only in the 19th century. It replaced silk and hemp sutures which caused inflammation and severe hemorrhage because the body could not absorb them. Sutures made from catgut are readily absorbed by the human body and are consequently extensively used for internal stitches. Although synthetic alternatives are available, catgut sutures are still widely used in hospitals throughout the world.
[edit]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catgut
2006-11-05 11:01:39
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Well of gut, not necessarily cat gut.
2006-11-05 11:00:28
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answer #6
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answered by the shadow knows 3
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well poor farmers made em out of cat guts
2006-11-05 11:02:17
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answer #7
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answered by Parvati 3
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Horse hair. My daughter plays the violin and that is what they told me when i bought hers.
2006-11-05 11:01:59
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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2017-03-01 01:35:15
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answer #9
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answered by ? 3
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Yes, they used many different materials but that was one of the first, the insides of animals were strung and about the horse hair thing thats the bow.
2006-11-05 11:07:13
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answer #10
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answered by ? 2
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