By Robert Scott


Your kid wants to play the violin, and you know nothing about this instrument. In the heat of the moment, you've though about getting a book to answer to that nagging question of what size violin should I buy for my child. But that will probably take too long, and you want something now. It is easy information to get hold of. All you need is a tape measure and your child.

Take the measuring tape and find out the distance from the left side of your kid's neck right the way down to their outstretched palm. Note down the figure, and measure again from the neck right down to the wrist only. While you are doing this, make sure that the arm is straight and is also at a right angle to the body.

An average of the details that you now have will be useful. Go through the information below and correct the right arm length with the right instrument dimensions. In the case of this particular musical instrument, the dimensions for the smaller player come in fractions in comparison to the full sized instrument. When everything is matched up, the child will be able to play without any difficulty.

For our purposes here, we will start with the tiny tots. In the age group between three and five, a fourteen inch measurement means that the best buy will be an instrument at one sixteenth of the full size.

One that is sized as a tenth will be adequate for a young person from the ages of four to five who has an arm length of fifteen inches. If your child is between four and six years and the measurement you took is around sixteen and a half inches, they will be best served using an instrument that is an eighth smaller. In the range of those who are five to seven, a half size is best.

Moving on to those who are twelve, nine and any age in between, if their measurements came in at twenty one and a half or twenty two, then it is most likely they will fit best with a three quarter size. Anything above twenty two means that a seven eighths will do.

For those who are eleven plus and have an arm length of twenty three inches, go for the full size. By now, the chatter of asking yourself what size violin should I buy for my child should have ceased, and you can breathe a sigh of relief.




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