I thought I'd have a crack at making a traditional low whistle this weekend, (a larger version of an Irish/tin whistle, but lower in tone).
I found a nice looking piece of spalted elder which seemed a good size for the project.

First step was to hollow it out. Not having an auger, I used whatever was to hand. A modified carving fork, a skewer and some doweling wrapped in sand paper did the bulk of the work.

Then make the fipple/blade. It looked all right at this point, unfortunately I was tempted to adjust it later on and ended up making the hole a bit too big.


Create a notch at the top for the air to travel down and carve and fit a dowel for the mouthpiece.


Once the mouthpiece is done and producing a decent tone, it needs to be tuned. Slowly remove material from the bottom until you hit the desired note. In this case F.

Then place and tune the finger holes. Start from the bottom and widen each hole until you get what you're after. This one is tuned to F Major.
I positioned the holes as you would get on a flute.

A final sand down and oil and it's good to go.

This was a first attempt. The sound isn't as clean as it could be and the walls are a bit thick. But it plays a tune and spans a couple of octaves. All in all, I'm pretty happy with how it turned out.


I found a nice looking piece of spalted elder which seemed a good size for the project.

First step was to hollow it out. Not having an auger, I used whatever was to hand. A modified carving fork, a skewer and some doweling wrapped in sand paper did the bulk of the work.

Then make the fipple/blade. It looked all right at this point, unfortunately I was tempted to adjust it later on and ended up making the hole a bit too big.


Create a notch at the top for the air to travel down and carve and fit a dowel for the mouthpiece.


Once the mouthpiece is done and producing a decent tone, it needs to be tuned. Slowly remove material from the bottom until you hit the desired note. In this case F.

Then place and tune the finger holes. Start from the bottom and widen each hole until you get what you're after. This one is tuned to F Major.
I positioned the holes as you would get on a flute.

A final sand down and oil and it's good to go.

This was a first attempt. The sound isn't as clean as it could be and the walls are a bit thick. But it plays a tune and spans a couple of octaves. All in all, I'm pretty happy with how it turned out.

