edi malinaric Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Hi All - just began making my violin's fingerboard. Sharp plane & straight-grained ebony - only a pleasure. cheers edi
JohnCockburn Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 Hi All - just began making my violin's fingerboard. Sharp plane & straight-grained ebony - only a pleasure. cheers edi It's fun if you can find nice ebony billets. The last batch I bought from Dick were useless: luckily managed to sell them on to a cabinet maker who likes stripy ebony with gnarly grain!
Michael_Molnar Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 I get great ebony blanks from Susan at Taylor - USA. She often has a booth at the VSA meetings.
Christopher Jacoby Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 I got lovely boards from Alex Ross(Cavallo) in Baltimore this last November.
Matthias Lange Posted April 30, 2012 Report Posted April 30, 2012 It's fun if you can find nice ebony billets. The last batch I bought from Dick were useless: luckily managed to sell them on to a cabinet maker who likes stripy ebony with gnarly grain! Usually one out of ten is ok. I give the remaining nine to wood turners as pen blanks... Matthias
Don Noon Posted May 1, 2012 Report Posted May 1, 2012 The last batch I bought from Dick I get great ebony blanks from Susan at Taylor - USA. She often has a booth at the VSA meetings. I got lovely boards from Alex Ross(Cavallo) in Baltimore this last November. And you must have gotten all of the documentation with it, specifying origin and species and all the other importer paperwork, to prevent the Lacey Act enforcers from confiscating and destroying it, right? Yeah, right.
jezzupe Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 And you must have gotten all of the documentation with it, specifying origin and species and all the other importer paperwork, to prevent the Lacey Act enforcers from confiscating and destroying it, right? Yeah, right. Oh gee Don, thanks for the reminder of the "regime" now I have to puke just a little...which reminds me very nice Edi, they are "wa'ffer thin" Lacey act? don't think I could eat another bite Its the land of the free, as long as you have the proper documents, lic#, insurance, fee's, permits, applications...oh and money...er debt, same thing, you know, if you buy into that kinda crap
lyndon Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 are you buying the premium grade from dick, i know internationals top grade at about 24usd is just fine....
jacobsaunders Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 are you buying the premium grade from dick, i know internationals top grade at about 24usd is just fine.... Dick is only a dealer. The fingerboards are actualy manufactured by Klier in Mörendorf (near Bubenreuth), so you could order directly there http://www.klier-josef.de/
JohnCockburn Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 Dick is only a dealer. The fingerboards are actualy manufactured by Klier in Mörendorf (near Bubenreuth), so you could order directly there http://www.klier-josef.de/ Hi Jacob, speaking for myself I was talking about unshaped ebony boards from dick, not shaped manufactured blanks, which I do get from jurgen and am very happy with. Maybe he also sells unshaped boards? Anyway, I decided life was too short.......
Flyboy Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 And you must have gotten all of the documentation with it, specifying origin and species and all the other importer paperwork, to prevent the Lacey Act enforcers from confiscating and destroying it, right? Yeah, right. Unless you're importing or exporting (i.e. dealing with customs agents), the government still has to establish probable cause to seize materials. That means the Feds has get a judge to sign off. In practice this means the government must have some form of evidence that you imported/exported illegally. If the government can't establish cause they won't be able to seize anything. Think about what this means for a second. Say you buy some ebony fingerboard blanks at VSA (or some other domestic supplier). All you need to cover your butt is get an affidavit from the dealer stating that the wood was legally imported in accordance to the Lacey Act or CITES (if applicable). If your wood gets seized despite this affidavit, that means your dealer or somebody further up the supply chain screwed up royally. You then sue the dealer if you need to recover costs. You should think of this as a form of indemnification to the customer by the dealer. If you source ebony from India or Germany (or from any other foreign country), then it is your responsibility to get the proper permits, Lacey Act documentation, procedures, & declarations in order so customs doesn't seize it. (No different from importing any other product.) There's no need for histrionics.
jacobsaunders Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 Hi Jacob, speaking for myself I was talking about unshaped ebony boards from dick, not shaped manufactured blanks, which I do get from jurgen and am very happy with. Maybe he also sells unshaped boards? Anyway, I decided life was too short....... Yes, I can't imagine ANYBODY in Bubenreuth beeing unwilling to seperate you from your money
MikeC Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 Its the land of the free, as long as you have the proper documents, lic#, insurance, fee's, permits, applications...oh and money...er debt, same thing, you know, if you buy into that kinda crap That will go down as one of my favorite quotes
Craig Tucker Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 There's no need for histrionics. Interesting quote considering... Without histrionics, much, if not most, of Maestronet wouldn't exist!
David Burgess Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 If your wood gets seized despite this affidavit, that means your dealer or somebody further up the supply chain screwed up royally. You then sue the dealer if you need to recover costs. So if I spend a bunch of time, and money on legal fees, I may be able to recover my 250 bucks, assuming that the dealer still has any assets after the government comes down on them too? That's quite comforting, especially if the fingerboard is already on a completed instrument. If the instrument has already been sold, will the entire instrument be seized, or will my client be able to keep the violin to use, once the government has skillfully removed the fingerboard? Should we also be requesting affidavits for pegs, tailpieces, upper nuts and saddles? How might I obtain affidavits for the fingerboard blanks in my inventory which I purchased 10 years ago, or how can I prove that these are the very same fingerboards listed on old receipts, as opposed to something purchased after the Lacey act kicked in? I can see how the issue might appear quite simple and tidy, to one who is not actually a violin maker.
Michael_Molnar Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 And you must have gotten all of the documentation with it, specifying origin and species and all the other importer paperwork, to prevent the Lacey Act enforcers from confiscating and destroying it, right? Yeah, right. I have an import license. It took quite a lot of leg work to get one. (I posted that ordeal in a much earlier MN thread.) Sometimes the wood comes through US Customs without any dated stamp of inspection and approval. I just file away the shipping documents (invoice, license certificates) just in case. My reading of the law is that my responsibility ends with doing just that and nothing more - keeping my records. No big deal. The Lacey Law IMHO has become a lightning rod for anti-government hysteria. Stay Tuned. Mike
David Burgess Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 Did having an import license, and keeping records protect Gibson or Nagel?
Craig Tucker Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 The Lacey Law IMHO has become a lightning rod for anti-government hysteria. Stay Tuned. Mike You know that old saying - "One mans anti-government hysteria, is another mans level-headed plea against omnipotent government control..."
Flyboy Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 You know that old saying - "One mans anti-government hysteria, is another mans level-headed plea against omnipotent government control..." If you think Lacey represents some form of "ominpotent government control" you should look at the alternatives, like Haiti. The island of Hispaniola consists of Haiti and Dominican Republic: http://archive.org/details/SVS-2640
Craig Tucker Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 If you think Lacey represents some form of "ominpotent government control" you should look at the alternatives, like Haiti. The island of Hispaniola consists of Haiti and Dominican Republic: http://archive.org/details/SVS-2640 So, that's what you got out of my post?
jezzupe Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 I have an import license. It took quite a lot of leg work to get one. (I posted that ordeal in a much earlier MN thread.) Sometimes the wood comes through US Customs without any dated stamp of inspection and approval. I just file away the shipping documents (invoice, license certificates) just in case. My reading of the law is that my responsibility ends with doing just that and nothing more - keeping my records. No big deal. The Lacey Law IMHO has become a lightning rod for anti-government hysteria. Stay Tuned. Mike Mike, there is no "government", there is a division of the central bank called "goverenment"
Michael_Molnar Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 You know that old saying - "One mans anti-government hysteria, is another mans level-headed plea against omnipotent government control..." Sounds like "truthiness" to me.
Craig Tucker Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 Sounds like "truthiness" to me. It's the best I could come up with on short notice...
MeyerFittings Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 If you get boards from Taylor USA why would the Lacy Act concern you? I've never heard of anyone, especially small timers like us, being confiscated between States. Unless the boards are made of hashish of course.
David Burgess Posted May 2, 2012 Report Posted May 2, 2012 If you get boards from Taylor USA why would the Lacy Act concern you? Because as I understand it, the final purchaser is left holding the bag for the product having met legal requirements all the way through the supply chain. I trust Susan, but was she standing there, verifying that everything was legal, with the proper paperwork in place (in a foreign language and a foreign legal system) as the trees were cut down and processed? Or does she need to accept some things on faith herself?
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