This electric guitar is made with four different types of wood. Its carvings are akin to ones made by the Swiss artist H.R. Giger. It has a 14-string custom bridge.
Daniel Furian initially trained as a mechanical engineer and loved playing the guitar. As he always felt attracted to craftsmanship, his path gradually led him in this direction. In 2006, in the shed of his parents' house in Carinthia, Daniel built his first electric bass guitar using his grandfather's old tools. Now, the showpiece can be admired in Daniel's workshop. After some time building instruments for friends, Daniel wondered why not turn the hobby into a career. He registered for the technical school for string and plucked instrument-making in Hallstatt, Austria and opened his workshop in Graz in 2014. “While the city is less famous for instrument making than Cremona, Graz was home to a few renowned violin makers in the last few centuries,” Daniel says about the Styrian capital.
Read the full interviewPhoto: ©Daniel Furian
This electric guitar is made with four different types of wood. Its carvings are akin to ones made by the Swiss artist H.R. Giger. It has a 14-string custom bridge.
Photo: ©Daniel Furian
This bell cittern is a copy of an instrument made by the German musical instrument maker Joachim Tielke (1641 – 1719). It is made with spruce and ebony wood and sports parchment rosettes as ornamentation.
Photo: ©Daniel Furian
This electric guitar has an open headstock, and a neck-through design.
Photo: ©Daniel Furian
This is a handcrafted violin, finished with an oil varnish.
Photo: ©Daniel Furian
This is a custom electric bass guitar built as a multiscale instrument with five strings.