アート
美容とウェルネス
工芸
文化と歴史
エンターテインメント
環境
食品と飲料
グリーンフューチャー
リバースエンジニアリング
科学
スポーツ
テクノロジー
ウェアラブル
Building a Langspil — The Icelandic Drone Zither
Woody

作成者

Woody

3. 7月 2026NO
2
0
0
0
0

Building a Langspil — The Icelandic Drone Zither

Build Iceland's traditional drone zither: a long wooden soundbox with one fretted melody string and two drone strings that ring constantly beneath the tune, so a single player makes melody and harmony at once. A serious maker build in the drone zither and how a soundbox amplifies strings.
中級者
Several hours over a few sessions

手順

1

Melody and drone from one box

The langspil is Iceland's drone zither: a long soundbox with one fretted melody string and one or two drone strings that ring under every note, so one player sounds a tune AND its harmony at once.
2

Cut the soundbox parts

Cut a base, two side ribs and two end blocks for a long, narrow box about 80 cm long and 8-10 cm wide. Icelanders used driftwood — pine, birch or oak.

このステップの材料:

Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)1

必要な工具:

HacksawHacksaw
3

Glue the box frame

Glue the two ribs to the base and end blocks to make a long, shallow open box. Clamp it and let the glue set fully.

このステップの材料:

PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1
4

Fit the soundboard

Glue a thin softwood soundboard over the top, overlapping the ribs slightly, to seal a resonant chamber. A thin, light top vibrates best.

このステップの材料:

Dry Softwood BoardDry Softwood Board1
PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1
5

Cut a soundhole

Cut a round soundhole in the soundboard so the sound built up inside the box can escape.

必要な工具:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
6

Drill the peg holes

At the headstock end, bore three tapered holes through the top for the tuning pegs — one for the melody string, two for the drones.

必要な工具:

AwlAwl
7

Fit the tuning pegs

Push a friction tuning peg into each hole so it turns stiffly and holds string tension without slipping.

このステップの材料:

Tuning PegsTuning Pegs3
8

Carve the nut and bridge

Carve a small hardwood nut near the pegs and a low bridge near the far end. The strings ride over both, lifted clear of the soundboard.

必要な工具:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
9

String it

Anchor three steel strings to small pins at the far end, run them over the bridge and nut, and wind each onto its tuning peg.

このステップの材料:

Steel Music WireSteel Music Wire1
10

Set the frets

Fit small metal frets across the soundboard UNDER THE MELODY STRING ONLY, spaced so pressing behind each one gives the next note of a diatonic scale.

このステップの材料:

Fret WireFret Wire1

必要な工具:

Metal FileMetal File
11

Tune the drones

Tune the two drone strings to a low keynote and its octave or fifth. They will sound continuously, giving the langspil its droning voice.
12

Tune the melody string

Tune the melody string to the keynote too. Check it against the frets — pressing behind each fret should climb cleanly through the scale.
13

Play it

Press the melody string behind the frets with one hand and pluck it with the other. The drones ring under every note. Try bowing or gently hammering it too.
14

Compendium — the drone zither

The langspil is a drone zither: a resonant box with strings stretched along the top. One fretted MELODY string carries the tune while one or two DRONE strings hold a constant note, so a single player produces melody and harmony together — the same principle as a bagpipe's chanter over its drones, or a hurdy-gurdy. The sealed soundbox is a resonator: the thin strings alone move almost no air, but they shake the light soundboard, which drives the air inside the box, which spills out through the soundhole — the box amplifies the strings, exactly as in a guitar or violin. String pitch follows the same three rules as the musical bow — tension, length and mass — and pressing the melody string just behind a fret shortens its speaking length to raise the pitch by a fixed step, which is the whole point of the frets. Iceland has few trees, so langspils were built from driftwood — pine, birch, oak; the instrument is first recorded in the 18th century and is a northern cousin of the German scheitholt and the Appalachian dulcimer, all box drone zithers. Icelandic schoolchildren still build and play their own today, some laser-cut from plywood in a Fab Lab — a heritage instrument kept alive by making it.

材料

6

必要な工具

4

You can swap these in

Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.

関連ブループリント

これらのブループリントは知識を共有しています — 技術、材料、原理

CC0 パブリックドメイン

このブループリントはCC0で公開されています。許可を求めずに、自由にコピー、修正、配布、あらゆる目的で使用できます。

メイカーを応援するには、ブループリント経由で製品を購入してください。メイカーには メイカーコミッション がベンダーにより設定されています。または、このブループリントの新しいイテレーションを作成し、自分のブループリントにコネクションとして含めて収益を共有できます。

ディスカッション

(0)

ログイン してディスカッションに参加

コメントを読み込み中...