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Building an Oud — The Fretless Arabic Lute
Woody

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Woody

3. July 2026NO
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Building an Oud — The Fretless Arabic Lute

Build an oud: the deep-bowled, short-necked lute at the heart of Arabic and Turkish music — and famously FRETLESS, so your fingers can slide to any pitch and play the microtones of maqam. Shape the bowl, fit the bent pegbox, string the courses, and learn why leaving the frets off opens up the notes between the notes. A serious maker build in the fretless plucked string.
Intermediate
Several hours over several sessions

Instructions

1

A lute with no frets

The oud is the deep-bowled short-necked lute of Arabic and Turkish music. Unlike a guitar or bağlama it has NO frets, so a player can slide the fingers to any pitch — including the microtones between the Western notes.
2

Shape the bowl body

Build a deep, rounded bowl body from many thin wooden staves (ribs) glued edge to edge over a mould. The big bowl gives the oud its warm, resonant voice.

Materials for this step:

Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)Baltic Birch Plywood (1/8 inch, 12x12, 10-Pack)1 piece
PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1 piece

Tools needed:

HacksawHacksaw
3

Fit the soundboard

Glue a thin flat soundboard over the bowl and cut one or more decorative sound-holes (rosettes) in it.

Materials for this step:

Dry Softwood BoardDry Softwood Board1 piece
PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1 piece

Tools needed:

Sloyd Carving KnifeSloyd Carving Knife
4

Fit the neck and pegbox

Fit a short, SMOOTH neck — no frets at all — ending in a pegbox that bends sharply back from the neck, the oud's signature shape.

Materials for this step:

Dowel RodDowel Rod1 piece
PVA Wood GluePVA Wood Glue1 piece
5

Fit the pegs and string it

Fit the pegs and string it with paired courses — bright strings for the high courses and thicker wound strings for the low ones. An oud usually has eleven strings in six courses.

Materials for this step:

Tuning PegsTuning Pegs6 pieces
Steel Music Wire 0.032"Steel Music Wire 0.032"1 piece
Bronze WireBronze Wire1 piece

Tools needed:

AwlAwl
6

Tune the courses

Tune the six courses low to high. Doubling most strings in a course makes the sound fuller and richer.
7

Play with a risha

Pluck the strings with a long thin plectrum (the risha), pressing the strings onto the bare, fretless neck with your other hand.
8

Slide the microtones

Because there are no frets, slide a finger up or down the smooth neck to glide between notes and land exactly on the in-between pitches that make an Arabic maqam.
9

Compendium — why leave the frets off

A plucked string sounds higher the shorter its vibrating length, and pressing it against the neck is how you shorten it. A FRET is a fixed ridge that stops the string at one exact spot every time, which makes it easy to hit set notes accurately but locks you to those notes. The oud does the opposite on purpose: its neck is left perfectly smooth, so the string is stopped only by the soft pad of your finger, wherever you place it. That means you can land on any pitch at all — including the neutral, in-between microtones that Arabic and Turkish maqam music lives on, which fall in the cracks a fretted guitar can never reach — and slide smoothly from one to the next, bending and ornamenting notes like a singing voice. The price is that intonation is all in the player's ear and fingers, with no frets to guide them. The deep staved bowl and thin soundboard amplify the strings as in any lute, and the sharply back-bent pegbox keeps the short neck balanced. The oud is the direct ancestor of the European LUTE (the very word 'lute' comes from the Arabic al-ʿūd), and a cousin of the fretted bağlama and, distantly, the guitar — the whole family of plucked, soundbox strings whose oldest Youblob ancestor is the lyre.

Materials

7

Tools Required

3

You can swap these in

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

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