-40%

Pirastro Piranito Rosin, Rosin for Violin Viola Cello

$ 5.43

Availability: 63 in stock
  • EAN: 4016710125373
  • Brand: Pirastro
  • MPN: 900700
  • Condition: New
  • For Instrument: Violin
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Germany
  • Type: Rosin

    Description

    Pirastro Piranito Rosin, Rosin
    description
    Pirastro Piranito rosin
    for violin, viola and cello
    orange
    with low dust development, good adhesion and few background noises
    a simple, good and hard rosin for beginners at an attractive price
    packed in a sturdy, rectangular plastic box with a cloth to protect your fingers
    high quality
    pure natural product
    not aggressive for the bow and strings
    optimal usability
    About the arc resin
    Historical
    it:
    Since the emergence of bows for stringed instruments between the 10th and and 12. In the 19th century in the Near East, attempts were made to improve the adhesion of the bows to the strings by roughening and notching the initial plucking and rubbing rod and later by rubbing resin into the hair of the bow. The rosin got its name from the place Kolophon, located north of Ephesus in ancient Asia Minor, where bow resin was produced on a larger scale, as it is handed down in old documents.
    extraction:
    The natural resin is obtained today, as in Allen times, by cutting the trunks of pine, fir and spruce in spring and harvesting the resin in autumn. From this raw material, a balsam-like mass, turpentine oil is obtained by distillation. The remaining residues - resin, acids and water - are heated in open kettles until the water has evaporated. Impurities settle to the bottom so that the pure resin can be skimmed off.
    Since the emergence of bows for stringed instruments between the 10th and and 12. In the 19th century in the Near East, attempts were made to improve the adhesion of the bows to the strings by roughening and notching the initial plucking and rubbing rod and later by rubbing resin into the hair of the bow. The rosin got its name from the place Kolophon, located north of Ephesus in ancient Asia Minor, where bow resin was produced on a larger scale, as it is handed down in old documents. The natural resin is obtained today, as in Allen times, by cutting the trunks of pine, fir and spruce in spring and harvesting the resin in autumn. From this raw material, a balsam-like mass, turpentine oil is obtained by distillation. The remaining residues - resin, acids and water - are heated in open kettl