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— Lavta

Turkish Lavta – Walnut & Mahogany Bowl, Inlaid Fingerboard

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

Striped walnut & mahogany bowl, handcrafted by master luthier Mustafa GezerdagBalances walnut’s clarity with mahogany’s warmth and sustainSame inlaid fingerboard and mother-of-pearl bird motif as the rest of the collection

Made by this luthier:

SKU: LVT-B-4 Categories: , Brand:

Description

Handcrafted by İzmir master oud maker Mustafa Gezerdag, this Turkish lavta pairs a striped walnut-and-mahogany bowl with a spruce top — part of a small series built around the same decorative fingerboard and pear-shaped body, distinguished from its siblings by bowl wood alone. A fretted plectrum lute that sits between the Arabic oud and the Anatolian saz, the lavta trades the oud’s fretless slide for a fretted neck that gives it a brighter, more precisely articulated voice.

This model splits the difference between two solid-wood options in the same series: walnut staves alternate with mahogany around the bowl, combining walnut’s dense, well-defined low-mid presence with mahogany’s warmth and longer sustain. Visually it reads as a two-tone stripe — deeper reddish mahogany against warmer tan walnut — closer to the classic walnut-mahogany pairing found across Ottoman lutherie than the maple-mahogany combination used elsewhere in this series.

The soundhole carries the same carved lattice-pattern rosette as the rest of the series, and the black pickguard is finished with the same hand-inlaid bird-and-feather motif in mother of pearl. The fingerboard, too, shares the series’ signature: a continuous scrolling inlay running its full length, more commonly seen on museum-grade instruments than on workshop production.

The top is solid spruce, carved for the stiffness-to-weight ratio that gives a pear-shaped lavta body its projected, articulate tone. The fingerboard is built on pine under the inlay work, and tuning runs on ebony friction pegs, the traditional choice for lavta’s fretted, makam-tuned courses.

BodyWalnut & 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

Players who want the balance point of the series — walnut’s clarity without losing mahogany’s warmth and sustain — will find this the most all-round voice on offer. It moves comfortably between grounded fasıl ensemble work and solo taksim passages that call on both definition and sustain, making it a sensible first choice for a player who hasn’t yet settled on a preference between the series’ brighter and warmer options.

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 brighter maple & mahogany model, the warmer solid mahogany model, or the classically-toned solid walnut 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 does mixing walnut and mahogany in the bowl achieve?
Walnut brings a dense, well-defined low-mid presence, while mahogany adds warmth and longer sustain. Alternating the two in the bowl staves gives a balanced voice between the series' brighter and warmer solid-wood options.
How does this compare to the other bowl-wood options in the series?
Same maker, dimensions, fingerboard inlay, and pickguard — only the bowl wood changes. This walnut-mahogany blend sits between solid walnut's classic clarity and solid mahogany's warmth, and is closer to traditional Ottoman lutherie pairing than the series' maple-mahogany model.
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.