Rudall and Rose for sale on ebay
Rudall and Rose for sale on ebay
I'm selling (reluctantly) an original Rudall and Rose cocus wood flute on e-bay. If you are interested, type Rudall and Rose into the ebay search and you will be taken to the listing.
- RudallRose
- Posts: 2405
- Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2001 6:00 pm
can't say as i've ever seen a warped cocus flute. But i suppose anythign is possible.
The head is not a patent head (and shouldn't be....it's too early in the serial numbers)
I'd date it ~1827-30
The silver crown without embossing is on another Rudall i've seen (a boxwood flute owned by jimmy noonan), so it's not unprecedented. This one however seems to have the ivory stem tip broken off (meaning the screw mechanism for the cork is ivory....again, not unprecedented for this period.)
The only thing to be wary of would be how well the pewter Eb seals. Frank Claudy's rudall is like this and has no issues because he keeps it well oiled. I have one that doesn't require the oil and seals just fine. Just noisy.
It's of the Large-medium hole variety, so the tuning is likely flat on the D because the foot joints were just a tad longer in the earlier Rudall days.
The key cups are flat, which is nice because it's so much easier to repad.
I do like that the crown and foot cover match. Rudall did this sometimes and when it's on the foot it was always a metal crown, so good to know it matches.
i will not be bidding.
The head is not a patent head (and shouldn't be....it's too early in the serial numbers)
I'd date it ~1827-30
The silver crown without embossing is on another Rudall i've seen (a boxwood flute owned by jimmy noonan), so it's not unprecedented. This one however seems to have the ivory stem tip broken off (meaning the screw mechanism for the cork is ivory....again, not unprecedented for this period.)
The only thing to be wary of would be how well the pewter Eb seals. Frank Claudy's rudall is like this and has no issues because he keeps it well oiled. I have one that doesn't require the oil and seals just fine. Just noisy.
It's of the Large-medium hole variety, so the tuning is likely flat on the D because the foot joints were just a tad longer in the earlier Rudall days.
The key cups are flat, which is nice because it's so much easier to repad.
I do like that the crown and foot cover match. Rudall did this sometimes and when it's on the foot it was always a metal crown, so good to know it matches.
i will not be bidding.
- Jon C.
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- Joined: Wed Nov 07, 2001 6:00 pm
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- Please enter the next number in sequence: 8
- Tell us something.: I restore 19th century flutes, specializing in Rudall & Rose, and early American flutes. I occasionally make new flutes. Been at it for about 15 years.
- Location: San Diego
I doubt that the flute is warped, it looks like the tenons are just loose.David Migoya wrote:can't say as i've ever seen a warped cocus flute. But i suppose anythign is possible.
The head is not a patent head (and shouldn't be....it's too early in the serial numbers)
I'd date it ~1827-30
The silver crown without embossing is on another Rudall i've seen (a boxwood flute owned by jimmy noonan), so it's not unprecedented. This one however seems to have the ivory stem tip broken off (meaning the screw mechanism for the cork is ivory....again, not unprecedented for this period.)
The only thing to be wary of would be how well the pewter Eb seals. Frank Claudy's rudall is like this and has no issues because he keeps it well oiled. I have one that doesn't require the oil and seals just fine. Just noisy.
It's of the Large-medium hole variety, so the tuning is likely flat on the D because the foot joints were just a tad longer in the earlier Rudall days.
The key cups are flat, which is nice because it's so much easier to repad.
I do like that the crown and foot cover match. Rudall did this sometimes and when it's on the foot it was always a metal crown, so good to know it matches.
i will not be bidding.
I have seen a couple of Wylde flutes with the matching foot and crown in silver, I guess it was vogue back then. To bad the head has been "repaired" with the huge pins... I agree that the foot is probably a tad flat, but it looks like a sweet flute.
"I love the flute because it's the one instrument in the world where you can feel your own breath. I can feel my breath with my fingers. It's as if I'm speaking from my soul..."
Michael Flatley
Jon
Michael Flatley
Jon
- johnkerr
- Posts: 1001
- Joined: Wed Apr 17, 2002 6:00 pm
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- Location: Falls Church VA USA
I think the warped appearance is due to photographic issues. Look at the other photos of the flute disassembled in its case and in various close-ups. They all appear warped, but if you assembled those warps you wouldn't get the same warp you see in the main photo. So I submit than none of the photos is a true gauge of any real-life warpage.
- Jon C.
- Posts: 3526
- Joined: Wed Nov 07, 2001 6:00 pm
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- Tell us something.: I restore 19th century flutes, specializing in Rudall & Rose, and early American flutes. I occasionally make new flutes. Been at it for about 15 years.
- Location: San Diego
Yours is the best!eilam wrote:my R&R is not a patent head, and has a beautiful matching cap and foot ring in fluted silver.
![big grin :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin_144.gif)
"I love the flute because it's the one instrument in the world where you can feel your own breath. I can feel my breath with my fingers. It's as if I'm speaking from my soul..."
Michael Flatley
Jon
Michael Flatley
Jon