Question for Larry and Lufin
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Great stories Lufin and Larry.
I used to have the Baldwin Hamilton Upright. I should have kept it, but I got caught up in thinking I needed a grand, so I bought the K169 Schimmel, which was way too big for my little house and more money than I should have spent. I sold that, and back at having a Kawai Upright. -
@ILM said in Question for Larry and Lufin:
Great stories Lufin and Larry.
I used to have the Baldwin Hamilton Upright. I should have kept it, but I got caught up in thinking I needed a grand, so I bought the K169 Schimmel, which was way too big for my little house and more money than I should have spent. I sold that, and back at having a Kawai Upright.Photos?
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@kluurs said in Question for Larry and Lufin:
Came close to having a Baldwin Hamilton around 1969 or so. I think it was less than $900 delivered at the time.
Mine was a graduation present in 1976. I don't remember the price, but, adjusted for inflation, it was probably close to what you were quoted at the time.
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So I have a question... when I move to Minnesoooooota, I plan on getting a grand piano (size TBD), but have an interesting option.
My grandpa (passed a few years ago) had a 1920s Baldwin grand, probably 5.5-feet, similar to the one in the photo below. I found this pic online just to give you an idea. He learned to play on it, which means my great grandparents bought it in the 20s. It’s now with my aunt, whom I’d imagine would give/sell it to me if I asked since she doesn’t really play it.
The option is...I know it’s not in great shape. Would it be worth a complete restoration? How much might that cost and would it get the sound quality to that of what a new grand might generate today?
Admittedly, knowing I’m playing the very keys that my great grandpa touched, among many family members (to include my daughter when she’s old enough to learn) is a major driving factor, but I’d also enjoy a piano that provides a top notch sound.
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@jon-nyc said in Question for Larry and Lufin:
I’ll let the guys who know what they’re talking about chime in
Well, you're on the wrong forum, obviously.
hesitant to restore a piano that small.
Is the cost of restoration significantly less/more for a smaller piano?
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From a dollar standpoi t unless you know how to do the work yourself, having a 5' 5" restored is not worth it. But you mentioned sentimental issues, and you can't put a dollar value on that. So it all comes down to whether you're willing to spend way more than the piano will be worth because of the sentimental value. You also need to bear in mind that not all rebuilders are good at it, not all rebuilds are the same, and it is very likely that what you end up with is a nice pretty door stop that plays and sounds like crap
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Good to know. Not sure it’s a 5.5 but it was a guess. Yes, the sentimental value is really all I care about, I’d have ZERO interest in ever re-selling it, but I’d also hope it could be restored so it sounds terrific as it wouldn’t just be a piece of furniture to walk by.
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@89th said in Question for Larry and Lufin:
Good to know. Not sure it’s a 5.5 but it was a guess. Yes, the sentimental value is really all I care about, I’d have ZERO interest in ever re-selling it, but I’d also hope it could be restored so it sounds terrific as it wouldn’t just be a piece of furniture to walk by.
It's most likely a 5'6" . Most likely a Model H. Scale is going to be very similar to a R.
Lindeblad in New Jersey has a recently rebuilt one they are asking $30k for. I don't think it is worth that.
Here's what I do know...If you rebuild it, you do so for sentimental reasons, because you ain't getting your money back out of it. That's the bad news.
The good news is that you have something, that if you want to throw the money into it, could produce a pretty decent piano. Give Rich a call at Cunningham's and just ask what a rebuild would cost.
You can use who you want, but if you're going to spend the money and expect a quality result, you need a good shop...And that ain't cheap.