Restringing your violin is a basic skill all avid players should know. It keeps your playing clear and crisp while also being part of your instrument’s basic care and maintenance. For professional players and collectors, however, restringing is also a matter of preserving setup, protecting tone, and avoiding unnecessary wear on a fine instrument.
When to Restring
If your instrument starts sounding dull, loses pitch easily, or feels less responsive to your fingers, then it is probably time to get a fresh set of strings. Professionals, however, tend to restring their instruments before a major performance or recording session. New strings give an instrument better projection, timbre, and articulation, so professional players will want their strings to stay as fresh as possible.
Choosing the Right Strings
The best string for you depends on your instrument, the way you play, and how you want to sound. There is a wide variety of violin strings to choose from. Sometimes, the same instrument can sound wildly different depending on which strings it has and whose hands it is in.
Synthetic core strings offer a warm sound with stable tuning, while steel core strings give a bright, radiant tone with greater longevity. Gut core strings are an age-old choice, giving a rich, elegant, and complex tone.
Strings also come in different tensions, tones, and end types that affect the instrument’s sound and feel.
Discerning violin players ought to think of their choice of strings as part of their broader musical strategy. For this reason, professional players buy their strings through reputable violin shops and professional luthiers who understand fine instruments and can advise on the best options.
What You Will Need
- One new violin string
- A tuner
- A soft, clean cloth
- A graphite pencil for the nut and bridge grooves
- A stable workspace with good lighting
To begin, do not remove all four strings at once. Instruments are meant to be kept under proper tension and should not be totally unstrung unless they are on a repair bench for professional work.
Restringing a Violin Step-by-Step
A) Loosen and Unwind Old String
Gently begin unwinding one of the violin’s strings with the tuning peg. Unwind it fully and remove the string from the peg hole and the tailpiece. Doing it this way will keep the bridge anchored and preserve its setup.
B) Inspect and Clean Your Instrument
Before installing the new string, inspect the bridge, nut, peg, peg hole, and fine tuner. Wipe away rosin dust and debris with a soft cloth. If the string grooves look dry, a light touch of pencil graphite in the nut and bridge grooves can help the string move more smoothly and reduce binding.
C) Install New String
Insert the ball or loop end into the tailpiece or fine tuner first, then feed the opposite end through the peg hole. Make sure the string sits cleanly in the nut and bridge grooves. Keep the string centered and controlled as you begin winding so it does not slip or twist unnecessarily. Wind the string neatly around the peg without overlapping coils. The windings should draw the string inward.
Bring the string up to pitch slowly. As you tune, keep checking the bridge to make sure it remains upright and properly aligned.
D) Repeat for the Other 3 Strings
Once you have replaced all four strings, the new strings will need time to stretch, so your violin’s tuning will likely be unstable until the strings break in and settle.
Depending on your string type, it may take a matter of hours or a few days for the strings to settle and hold tune. The synthetic core strings, for the most part, take just a few hours before they hold their tune. New strings may also sound brash when new. During this period, retune your violin when it loses pitch and play it normally to help the strings break in.
After a while, your instrument will sound clean, crisp, and find its perfect resonance.
Mistakes to Avoid
- Replacing all strings at once
- Letting the bridge lean forward
- Poor peg winding
- Using the wrong string set for the instrument
- Ignoring signs of setup issues beneath what seems like “just a string change”
Carelessness matters with violins. It is the small and simple mistakes that lead to the biggest issues down the line. At best, one or two small errors may only lightly affect tuning stability or timbre. But over time, what may seem like only a string issue can become worn grooves, sticky pegs, or a warped bridge. And if you play a fine antique model violin, such as a Stefano Scarampella or Gaetano Gadda, those small issues could cost you a fortune.
When to Get a Professional Restringing
For student instruments, restringing is often a manageable maintenance task. For professional players, collectors, and owners of valuable violins, professional restringing is often the better choice. A luthier can do more than install strings: they can evaluate bridge alignment, peg function, groove wear, string selection, and overall setup response in the same visit.
The most finely adjusted and historically important instruments have the lowest tolerances. They expect to be played and maintained at the highest level, and work done by a professional luthier can keep an antique instrument playing in ideal condition for generations.
If you need help choosing the right violin strings, want a professional restringing, or suspect your instrument needs more than a simple string change, we can help.
Our professionals at Givens Violins are trained to work with the finest instruments. Contact us by email at cgivens@givensviolins.com or call us at (612) 375-0708 or (800) 279-4323 to inquire about your instrument.

