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It's absolutely wonderful, my bow isn't scratchy when it plays and the sound quality is clearer than it was before with my old rosin
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The Liebenzeller rosin is now about $30, so I took a chance and bought this stuff, using it to break in a new bow
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However, when I applied it to my ethanol-cleaned bow, it produced a scratchy sound on my violin...this doesn't happen for my Melos rosin, which was the only rosin that I have used by then
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This product works great with my daughter's new bow, she doesn't have any complaints with it
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First, we cleaned her bow to remove as much old rosin as possible
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I literally had just started running my bow across it (after having used it not even 10 other times) and it just fell apart
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I just purchased this item together with a new cello bow, so I am not sure if the bow is awesome, the rosin is awesome or both
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This is my favorite bow rosin
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Maybe it was my bow or my strings, but this just didn't work for me
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Before I drop them, they do very well in keeping my bow ready for playing my fiddle
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This is also a perfect time to clean the bow of any old rosin and really reap the benefits of something high quality
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It does not help the bow grip the string very well at all.
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On your bow, Millant is a little grippier, so if you have a scratchy bow technique, you might prefer Jade
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Again I properly cleaned the bow and tried a different, quality soft rosin and presto, my bows were back to sounding the way they should
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2-3 slides is all it takes, my bow is ready to play.
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No need to try mix rosin when a new bow with the rosin labeled on the bow will reduce the mystery of trying to figure out which bow to used in different temperatures and humidity.