Skip to product information
1 of 12

Quiam

Quiam Ezo's Ukulele Throughneck Concert F

Quiam Ezo's Ukulele Throughneck Concert F

Regular price ¥99,000 JPY
Regular price Sale price ¥99,000 JPY
Sale Sold out
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

In stock

With a solid Hokkaido spruce body and neck-through construction, this F-hole Quiam guitar has a great sound!

Quiam is a Sapporo-based manufacturer that produces ukuleles using materials sourced from Hokkaido.
The through-neck series uses a single piece of Hokkaido spruce for the top, which has excellent acoustic properties. The body and neck are carved out of a single block of Japanese Sakhalin fir, making this a standard model from Quiam with a through-neck design.

This is a well-balanced ukulele that combines the strength of Japanese Sakhalin fir and the lightness of Japanese Ezo spruce. It is made from thinned wood and contributes to the preservation of forests in Hokkaido.
The same one-piece construction as the top-of-the-line Premium Series model, where the body and neck are carved out as a single piece, allows the entire instrument to vibrate, successfully producing a tone of a different dimension. With F-holes and a satin finish, this model has a volume that far surpasses that of the popular Throughneck Concert, making it the model that the manufacturer is most confident in.

Top: Hokkaido-grown Yezo spruce veneer Neck: Hokkaido-grown Todo fir Body: Hokkaido-grown Todo fir Fingerboard & bridge: Enju Scale: 408mm semi-long scale Integrated through-neck structure Nut width: 37mm
Pegs: Original gear pegs with satin finish

Sales price: ¥90,000 (excluding tax)
Case sold separately, one year warranty

View full details

Quiam

Quiam is a brand based in Minami-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido. They are particular about using wood from Hokkaido, and in particular, they make musical instruments that take advantage of the excellent acoustic properties of Ezo spruce.
Natural Ezo spruce is now very rare, but the company procures the precious wood that is harvested in small quantities and transforms it into ukuleles.