Banjo ukulele head material

Ukulele discussions
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Freeman Keller
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Joined: Mon Feb 27, 2012 11:34 am

Banjo ukulele head material

Post by Freeman Keller »

I am in the process of putting a new head on a very old banjo ukulele. I can find both goat and calf skins (and instructions for installing) - which would be preferable and why? The old head was torn and has some signatures and drawings that were done by family members - it will be kept for its history.
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Simon Chadwick
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Location: St Andrews, Scotland
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Re: Banjo ukulele head material

Post by Simon Chadwick »

I have a question that perhaps should have its own discussion but it is related to this so I'll post it here.

Is it possible to repair a skin head?

I have a pair of very old tambourines whose head is made from an old vellum legal document with handwriting. One has a small (7mm) split. Can it be glued or patched?

I ask here because I wondered if this torn banjo head could be repaired to preserve its original designs on the instrument.
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Jon Whitney
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Re: Banjo ukulele head material

Post by Jon Whitney »

Goat and calf skin are both good but I think calf is a little less elastic and therefore probably better. LIke wood, skin is a natural substance and there is tremendous variability in thickness, elasticity, color, and consistency. It comes down to a matter of taste.

Simon, you should be able to CA glue a small patch of craft paper or vellum on you tambourine head with no ill effects. I haven't done this but I've read of it being done for banjos.
Wayne Brown
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Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2012 6:46 pm
Location: Huntersville,NC

Re: Banjo ukulele head material

Post by Wayne Brown »

Freeman,
I restored a banjo uke a couple of years ago. The head needed to be replaced and it was a smaller size head than what we see today. I used a goat skin from a supplier of uke things from Texas (can't remember web site).
It worked out really well. The look of the skin was in keeping with the age of the banjo ukulele.
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