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— Lavta

Turkish Lavta – Maple & Mahogany Bowl, Ornate Inlaid Fingerboard

Original price was: €799,51.Current price is: €699,16. Save 100,35

Maple & mahogany bowl, handcrafted by master luthier Mustafa GezerdagFingerboard inlaid with a continuous decorative pattern — rare on a workshop lavtaMother-of-pearl bird motif pickguard and carved lattice rosette

Made by this luthier:

SKU: LVT-B-1 Categories: , Brand:

Description

Handcrafted by İzmir master oud maker Mustafa Gezerdag, this Turkish lavta pairs a striped maple-and-mahogany bowl with a spruce top and a fingerboard carrying decorative inlay work rarely seen on lavtas at this price point. A fretted plectrum lute with a pear-shaped body, the lavta sits between the Arabic oud and the Anatolian saz — closer in geometry to the oud, but with movable frets that give it a brighter, more precisely articulated voice.

The bowl is built from alternating maple and mahogany staves — the brightest, fastest-attack pairing in this series of four bowl-wood options. Maple contributes clarity and speed, while mahogany rounds out the midrange and adds sustain. The soundhole carries a carved, lattice-pattern rosette in the Ottoman tradition, and the black pickguard is finished with a hand-inlaid bird-and-feather motif in mother of pearl — a decorative signature shared across the series.

What distinguishes this lavta series most, though, is the fingerboard: rather than the plain dark wood most lavtas carry under their tied frets, this neck is inlaid along its full length with a continuous scrolling pattern. It’s a decorative touch drawn from Ottoman lutherie ornamentation, more commonly seen on museum-grade instruments than on workshop production, and it makes the neck as much a visual centerpiece as the bowl.

The top is solid spruce, carved for the stiffness-to-weight ratio that gives a pear-shaped lavta body its projected, clearly articulated tone — bright enough to cut through ensemble textures, warm enough to hold up in solo taksim. The neck carries pine fingerboard construction under the inlay work, and tuning runs on ebony friction pegs, the traditional choice for lavta’s fretted, makam-tuned courses.

BodyMaple & mahogany
SoundboardSpruce
FingerboardPine, with decorative inlay
PegsEbony friction pegs
Bowl Length44.5 cm
Bowl Width30.5 cm
Body Depth15.5 cm
String Length (Scale)68 cm

This lavta suits players moving from the oud into the fretted lavta tradition, as well as intermediate and advancing players who want the brightest, most articulate voice in the series — an edge in mixed-ensemble settings where a lavta needs to cut through rather than blend into the background.

Keep the bowl away from direct heat and sudden humidity swings, and check the tied gut or nylon frets periodically, as they can shift slightly with playing and need occasional repositioning for accurate intonation. This model is one of four bowl-wood options built by Mustafa Gezerdag on the same body and fingerboard: see the warmer solid mahogany model, the classically-toned solid walnut model, or the balanced walnut & mahogany model. For a case and spare strings, see our accessories collection. Readers curious about the instrument’s place in Ottoman music can find more on the lavta on Wikipedia.

Worldwide shipping & 15-day return.

Who makes this lavta?
This lavta is handcrafted by Mustafa Gezerdag, an İzmir master oud and lavta maker with over four decades at the bench, known for bringing real luthier-built craftsmanship to workshop-production instruments.
What makes the fingerboard on this lavta different from other lavtas?
Most lavtas carry a plain dark fingerboard under their tied frets. This model is inlaid along its full length with a continuous decorative pattern echoing the bowl's maple-and-mahogany striping — an ornamentation style more commonly seen on museum-grade instruments than on workshop builds.
How does a maple-and-mahogany bowl sound different from walnut-mahogany?
Maple gives a brighter, faster attack than walnut, while mahogany still rounds out the midrange and adds sustain. The result is a lighter, more articulate voice suited to cutting through ensemble textures.
Is the lavta fretted like a guitar, or fretless like an oud?
Fretted. The lavta uses movable gut or nylon frets tied around the neck, which support the makam quarter-tones of Ottoman classical and Turkish folk repertoire while allowing more precise intonation than a fretless instrument.
Is this lavta suitable for a player moving from the oud?
Yes. Its pear-shaped body and playing geometry are close to the oud, so oud players typically adapt quickly, while the fretted neck adds the melodic precision the lavta tradition is known for.