c.1920 Leonardo Nunes Koa Soprano Ukulele
This late-teens, early-20s soprano is the 2nd of 8 koa ukes I'm working on for a customer. This guy is a Nunes (Leonardo Nunes) uke made in Hawaii and, yessir, it sounds and plays great and looks it, too! Check out that beautiful flamed koa!
Work included a brige reglue, fret level/dress, seam repairs, replacement tuner pegs (vintage 20s uke pegs from my bin), cleaning and setup.
This is an interesting uke in the way it's so lavishly figured but extremely plain. I love that about older Hawaiian ukes: they're simple and folksy but very pretty.
The exaggerated "shield" headstock shape looks nice.
I had to cut down the original bridge a heck of a lot to get anywhere near correct action due to the neck angle. After cutting it down I reglued it to the top and then drilled tiny holes in the string-loading slots. Like some modern ukes, the way to string this up is now to pass the string through the hole, pull it out the soundhole, knot it, and then pull the string up to the tuner.
This has that lovely golden-orange color that the best koa seems to glow with.
Note how the back of the headstock actually has a rounded, radiused shape to it. This looks pretty fun in person.
Beautiful, domed-back construction and even more flame!
...and it wouldn't be complete without a nice endstrip...
...and soundhole label!
Comments
The one I have just has one very small crack and a slightly lifting section of one side at the end block. It was purchased new by the owner's grandfather. It's missing three tuners, so I'll save the one original and put four violin tuners on it without doing much reaming. I'll glue the crack and the lift, and it'll be a player again at about 98 years old.
I am curious as to the value. It appears to be KOA wood. If anyone can help...would appreciate a reply. My e-mail is: ronordi70@g-mail.com. Thanx
Martin coined the terms "soprano" & "concert" (and later "tenor") when a larger (than traditional) sized body 8-string model - the "taropatch" - was a sales dud (hard to tune and strings soon started popping out of the slots in relatively soft saddles - and they had bodies already made.). Before 1919 larger sizes in Hawaii were randomly made and just "bigger" (or "bigga" in Pidgin; nui aku or nuinui in Hawaiian), and made mostly by Sam Kamaka. This last part is according to my mom. who grew up in Hawaii and lived around the corner from the Kamakas. I have a collection teens and twenties Kamaka and Martin ukes, plus a +/- 1914 Style I L. Nunes with the George Bickel & Co distributor label, abalone dots & ivoroid friction pegs. It was a trainwreck when I got it - I was a le to restore it to good playing condition.