Vintage National Picks
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Brian Gattis
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Vintage National Picks
Are vintage national picks all they’re cracked up to be?
Thanks
Brian G
Thanks
Brian G
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Bill McCloskey
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I have the National Patent No 1787136, with the oval 8's and the round 3
http://www.deanhoffmeyer.com/nationalpicks/frameset.htm
I would never play with any other picks. They are the best I've ever used.
http://www.deanhoffmeyer.com/nationalpicks/frameset.htm
I would never play with any other picks. They are the best I've ever used.
Mullen G2 D10 9x9
Sho-Bud Maverick II
GFI Ultra D10 8x5
MSA D12 Superslide
Benoit 8 String Dobro
Sho-Bud Maverick II
GFI Ultra D10 8x5
MSA D12 Superslide
Benoit 8 String Dobro
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Brian Gattis
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Bill, do you sell them?Bill McCloskey wrote:I have the National Patent No 1787136, with the oval 8's and the round 3
http://www.deanhoffmeyer.com/nationalpicks/frameset.htm
I would never play with any other picks. They are the best I've ever used.
Thanks
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Bill McCloskey
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Bill McCloskey
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Brian Gattis
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Donny Hinson
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Re: Vintage National Picks
That depends on how you define "vintage". Are you talking picks actually made in the 1930's and 1940's, or the identical reproductions of the vintage picks made nowadays? The originals can go for $50-$75 each, but the (supposedly identical) repros can be had for $2 each.Brian Gattis wrote:Are vintage national picks all they’re cracked up to be?
Many other versions are illustrated here (click the thumbnails at the bottom for the actual differences):
http://www.deanhoffmeyer.com/nationalpicks/frameset.htm
My old ears probably can't tell any difference between the old ones and the new ones. How you shape the blade, how you strike the strings, and where you strike the strings can also change the sound. There's a lot of variables, so I think the interpretation of the sound can vary from one player to another.
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Brian Gattis
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Ronnie Boettcher
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That is all I use for my finger picks. Steel, and banjo. I bought a bunch back in the late 50's, and then in the 60's. Have the patent number on some, and some with no patent number. They will last me forever.
Sho-Bud LDG, Martin D28, Ome trilogy 5 string banjo, Ibanez 4-string bass, dobro, fiddle, and a tubal cain. Life Member of AFM local 142
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Jim Pitman
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Larry Allen
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Brian Gattis
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Larry Allen
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Hi Brian, I went on Amazon and put in National guitar finger picks...pages came up with several different ones...Say hello to Dave for me..I played music for a living for almost 50 years , tattooing was my day job, my kids have taken over and are musicians also..
Larry
Last edited by Larry Allen on 30 Jan 2019 11:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Mark McCornack
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Hi Brian,
I switched over to the Dunlop picks a couple decades ago. For me, mostly as a matter of comfort. The Nats are uncomfortable for me after playing a while. As for tone or other mojo factor, personally, I couldn’t see advantages to the Nationals but found the discomfort a negative. All this is a matter of personal prefference though, and there are obviously many National devotees out there.
If you would like a few of these, I found some oldies in my junk drawer. You are welcome to them (gratis) if you would like to PM me. They are a bit bent up, but a little patience and a pair of needle-nose ought to get you in business. Let me know if you’d like them.
Cheers,
Mark
I switched over to the Dunlop picks a couple decades ago. For me, mostly as a matter of comfort. The Nats are uncomfortable for me after playing a while. As for tone or other mojo factor, personally, I couldn’t see advantages to the Nationals but found the discomfort a negative. All this is a matter of personal prefference though, and there are obviously many National devotees out there.
If you would like a few of these, I found some oldies in my junk drawer. You are welcome to them (gratis) if you would like to PM me. They are a bit bent up, but a little patience and a pair of needle-nose ought to get you in business. Let me know if you’d like them.
Cheers,
Mark
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Erv Niehaus
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Drew Pierce
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I have not used these particular picks, but Warren Yates is known for doing an amazing job of reproducing old, out-of-production banjos and parts. No reason to expect these would be any different. https://www.yatesbanjos.com/picks.htm
Drew Pierce
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Mark McCornack
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Wow! $47 for two picks? REALLY?
I am a big fan of Yates work, and he is quite a clever fellow with things concerning banjos and fabrication. I can also appriciate that even soft tooling costs could make these prohibitively expensive to produce in small runs.
Nevertheless, this seems like it might be a potential source of disappointment to the buyer. I may be TOTALLY WRONG (it has been known to happen in the past), but I for one wouldn’t pony up half a C-note to find out if these are magic beans or the real-deal. BTW, “Nickle Silver†in itself is not intrinsicaly all that costly. No silver. It’s an alloy of copper, zinc, and nickle (i.e. a silver colored brass)
Anybody out there tried these? If so, your opinion would be worth a great deal more than my speculation. Paying $47 for a pair of picks just doesn’t make sense to me though.
Mark
I am a big fan of Yates work, and he is quite a clever fellow with things concerning banjos and fabrication. I can also appriciate that even soft tooling costs could make these prohibitively expensive to produce in small runs.
Nevertheless, this seems like it might be a potential source of disappointment to the buyer. I may be TOTALLY WRONG (it has been known to happen in the past), but I for one wouldn’t pony up half a C-note to find out if these are magic beans or the real-deal. BTW, “Nickle Silver†in itself is not intrinsicaly all that costly. No silver. It’s an alloy of copper, zinc, and nickle (i.e. a silver colored brass)
Anybody out there tried these? If so, your opinion would be worth a great deal more than my speculation. Paying $47 for a pair of picks just doesn’t make sense to me though.
Mark
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Brian Gattis
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Drew Pierce
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Mark McCornack, I can't disagree. $47 for two picks is crazy. But apparently people are paying more than that for just one of the originals.
OTOH, $47 would be close to the cheapest part of my entire rig. I've spent way more over the years on stuff that didn't work well at all.
Personally, I have been using National NP2s for banjo and Dunlop chrome (cobalt?) plated on steel for many years. Works for me.
Personally, I have been using National NP2s for banjo and Dunlop chrome (cobalt?) plated on steel for many years. Works for me.
Drew Pierce
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Emmons D10 Fatback, S10 bolt-on, Evans RE500, Hilton volume and delay pedals.
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Bill McCloskey
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Mark McCornack
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Larry Beem
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picks
I actually have a couple sets of Yates picks. They are a little thinner sounding to me on banjo, but I love them on steel. The best of the best are of course the old Nationals. They are getting so expensive and hard to find that I looked high and low for a replacement. For less than half the price of originals, these are really close!!
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Cartwright Thompson
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I gave a pair to Gary Carter several years back after he gave me his newly released album (I also play banjo and have used the Hoffmeyer since the came out when they were first introduced to the banjo world). He was using the NP2's I believe at the time which are junk in my opinion. Several weeks later he emailed me asking where did I ever get those picks. Told him about Dean Hoffmeyer. He was astounded by them and I suspect that's exclusively what he uses now..to make an analogy picks are to steel guitarist like putters are to pro golfers, they'll play most any type of iron in their contract but the one thing the mfg don't have control of is the putter (money club) and finger picks are like that to a steel guitarist. Ok got the week off and now back to lurking.. oh and I know I posted this quite a while ago and got flamed on how much they cost.. well go ahead and putt with a two by four..Cartwright Thompson wrote:Are used original Nationals for many years, but now I like the Hoffmeyers more. They’re not cheap at about $30 a pair but they are worth every penny.
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