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Use round, rectangular are OK, don't put it in a hot place, be careful that it will melt, and then solidify and deform, if you save it very well, when you first start to use it, after the first few times you tighten the bow, move evenly from the bow root to the bow tip in a certain order, don't wipe a place specifically, put it on it and rub it back and forth dozens of times, the rosin will appear a shallow concave ditch, and then on the rosin, just along the ditch, but don't make the ditch too narrow, it is easy to break the bow hair if it is narrower than the hair!
Please don't listen to anything like heated rosin, pure layman!
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Put the rosin on the bow, hold the pellets with a cloth, rub! Remember to tighten the bow.
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Use a round one, don't mash it, put the bow on it and rub it back and forth until a shallow concave groove appears on the round rosin, and then you can rub it according to the line on the ditch.
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A professor from a ** college told me that rosin must avoid pulling out the "groove", otherwise the rosin utilization rate will be low, and the bow will be broken, of course, if you don't care so much about your equipment, you can also do it.
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Mix with alcohol and brush directly! Uniformity guaranteed! ~~
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Mine is rectangular and has a bow shape on the surface, and it's recessed, so it fits in very well, and it feels like a good brush, and I don't know why you're round, and it's hard to brush It's hard to buy a rectangle, like a matchbox.
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Heat the rosin, do not melt it completely, and be sure to apply it evenly.
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Dizzy... Did yours last a long time and then be crushed? I can only say that the next time you buy a round one, you will rotate it while wiping it when you use it, so that when you use it at the end, the surface is flat and not easy to break The current one seems to have to be replaced.
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This is to increase the friction between the bow hairs and the strings when playing the violin, so that the violin can make a sound. The bow hair of the violin is made of the hair of a horsetail, which has a smooth texture. The strings of the violin are made of nylon or metal, and the texture is relatively smooth.
The principle of violin sound is mainly based on vibration, and the generation of vibration depends on friction.
At this time, it is necessary to apply rosin, which looks like a large piece on the outside, but in fact, the effect after application is a small grain. Applying rosin can make the surface of the bow hairs uneven and no longer smooth. In this way, the friction between the bow hair and the string increases, and there is naturally a sound.
The four strings of the violin and the actual pitch.
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When you first learn the piano, the teacher will stick the line on your fingerboard, you just need to find the position according to the fingering, and at a certain time the teacher will tear off the pasted line, which is relatively difficult at this time, it is very important to listen to the ear, and find the corresponding position in combination with the pitch and feel. I'm like this, I don't know if there has been any change now, hope it helps.
Although the toothpaste is very clean, if it is really a good piano, it is absolutely necessary to wipe it with rosin oil, which will look smoother on the surface after wiping. If it's just an ordinary piano practice, you don't have to bother to take rosin oil, after all, good rosin oil is not cheap.
What do you want?
Look at you like this, let's practice the basic skills well... >>>More