Help Please, trying to get the history of my mother's flute

Flute History and Instrument Purchase

Moderators: Classitar, pied_piper, Phineas

Post Reply
jewillso
Posts: 1
Joined: Fri Oct 05, 2007 1:51 pm
Location: Pittsburgh, PA

Help Please, trying to get the history of my mother's flute

Post by jewillso »

I have recently discovered my mother's flute in the basement. She said she purchased it either in Germany or the U.S. in the late 50's early 60's, so it is definitely vintage. The name on the flute is "American Diplomat" and it says it is made in Italy. Serial number is 2647. I believe it is some sort of metal, maybe sterling silver because it has a silver tone to it and has some tarnish. I cannot find anything about American Diplomat on the web. Was it a subset of Conn flutes? If anyone has any ideas about the history of this flute I would appreciate it, thanks!

fluttiegurl
Posts: 882
Joined: Fri Dec 10, 2004 11:05 pm

Post by fluttiegurl »

I have only seen one of these, and I believe it was a Conn product though I am not 100% sure. That would at least give you a place to start. Good luck!

User avatar
flutepicc06
Posts: 1353
Joined: Mon May 29, 2006 11:34 pm

Post by flutepicc06 »

An easy way to tell what it's made of (I'm betting sliver plate over nickel silver or brass) is to look at the bit of the headjoint that slips into the body. If it's the same silvery color as the rest of the flute, odds are good you have a silver instrument (whether sterling or coin is difficult to know), but if it's a brassy color different from the rest of the head, it's probably silver plate. This is because the tenons can't be silver plated, as the plate will wear off after many assemblies and disassemblies, eventually changing the fit of the headjoint into the body, and causing leaks.

JeffD
Posts: 1
Joined: Wed Oct 10, 2007 6:57 pm

Post by JeffD »

The instruments coming out of Italy in the 50's and 60's were the equivalent of the Japanese instruments in the 70's, the Taiwanese in the 80's and 90's.

I have turned several that were not worth repairing into lamps.

JD

Post Reply