HALLOWELL — To the untrained eye, it may not have looked impressive.

Joel Amsden removed the neck from an acoustic guitar, then used a plane to make precise adjustments to the instrument and put the pieces back together. Yet the repair is not simple, whether you’re doing it before an audience or in a quiet studio.

“It’s like open-heart surgery,” said Nate Rudy, the city manager of Hallowell, who plays music himself and was in the audience. “He did this phenomenal job with 20 people huddled around his bench.”

Amsden’s demonstration was one of dozens that happened throughout the weekend as Mainers who appreciate stringed instruments converged on Hallowell. The city was holding the second annual Maine Luthiers Exhibition & Music Showcase, a weekend event that featured performances, workshops and an exhibit of Maine-made stringed instruments.

Anna Schaab explains the process of how she made her violin with the help of a mentor. Schaab said if she is successful in sourcing tools in the Orono area, where she attends University of Maine at Orono, she will construct another. Schaab made a presentation on the process to event attendees an performed a short piece in Hallowell on Sunday.

The word “luthier” originally referred to lute makers but now applies to anyone who makes or repairs stringed instruments.

Amsden, who runs Kennebec Instrument and Amplifier, gave his demonstration at City Hall, where a series of other programs were held from Friday evening to late Sunday.

Advertisement

Multiple other venues participated, including the Harlow Gallery and several local bars.

The exhibit of instruments, which was held at the Harlow Gallery, included everything from an electric guitar with a body resembling a fish to cellos and violins that were marketed for tens of thousands of dollars.

By midday Sunday, more than 100 passes had been sold, and Rudy said turnout was about four times larger than last year.

Musicians of all ages found ways to participate in the event. Early Sunday afternoon, young kids from a group called the Pineland Fiddlers performed. Before they hit the stage, Anna Schaab a 19-year-old from Farmingdale, gave a presentation about her successful effort to build a violin, culminating in a short performance.

Schaab played the violin off-and-on from the time she was 3 and now studies engineering and physics at the University of Maine in Orono.

Her passions of engineering and music came together late in high school when she decided to make her own instrument.

Advertisement

She started with a kit and worked under the guidance of an instructor in Brunswick. The steps included using knives, chisels and planes to shape the violin’s body from pieces of maple, making a series of precise measurements to ensure the neck would fit into the body and applying just the right amount of varnish to give the instrument the desired color and sound.

“It’s amazing, just knowing that I put this together and enjoyed it,” Schaab said, adding that she hopes to make another violin using tools available at the university.

Nate Rudy, Hallowell city manager, discusses his involvement with the second annual Maine Luthier Exhibition & Music Showcase in Hallowell on Sunday.

The Maine Luthiers Exhibition & Music Showcase received funding from several different sources, including area businesses and a grant from the Maine Arts Commission. It was timed to happen on Maine Craft Weekend, a statewide event.

The city also chipped in, budgeting about $1,700 to market the event, pay the musicians and cover other costs, according to Rudy.

The City Council backed the event, he said, because it understands that promoting the arts can help attract visitors and develop the local economy.

Last year, the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis found that arts and culture contributed more than 16,000 jobs and $764.9 million in worker income to Maine in 2014.

Deborah Fahy, executive director of the Harlow Gallery, said more than 200 people came to the exhibit of stringed instruments on Saturday – compared with 20-40 people who usually come on weekend days.

There was another cause for celebration in Hallowell: Two-way traffic recently returned to Water Street after months of construction.