Product: Hola! Music 36" Acoustic Guitar Bundle for Beginners and Kids
Model: HG-36PK, HG-36LB, HG-36PP, HG-36SB
Condition: New
QUALITY DESIGN:
This kids guitar features a smooth spruce top with a mahogany back, sides, and neck. With a glossy finish and a rosewood fingerboard and bridge, it won’t just be the music that’s turning heads.
SET INCLUDES:
Our beginner guitars are a complete set! You’ll get a padded gig bag with a front compartment, backpack straps, and a handle, 3 picks in different sizes, a pick-guard, a hex key, and a strap.
PRE-STRUNG:
This is the ultimate beginner guitar for kids and adults alike. It’s pre-strung with high-quality D’Addario EXP16 coated Phosphor Bronze strings. Just tune up and jam out!
PERFECT FOR KIDS:
The perfect kid guitar for little hands. At 3/4 the size, this HG-36SB small guitar is ideal for children aged 8-12, between 4’6" and 4’11" in height.
MAKES A GREAT GIFT:
From starting students to shining shredders, our 3/4 guitar is a timeless present for any mini musician in your life. Get your children started early with this kids guitar for boys and girls!
Available Colors
Pink, Purple, Light Blue, Sunburst
Item Weight
1 pounds
Product Dimensions
19 x 5 x 2 inches
Back Material
Mahogany
Body Material
Wood
Fretboard Material
Walnut Wood
String Material
coated phosphor bronze
Top Material
Spruce
Neck Material Type
Mahogany
Number of Strings
6
Guitar Bridge System
Fixed
Size
Acoustic 3/4 Size
What’s Included?
1x Hola Music Acoustic Guitar Bundle for Beginners and Kids
@DrunkCat there are fun, engaging, intelligent and creative things to say about the downsides of using AI. Spend some time today trying to imagine what those things are! I believe you can do it!
@DrunkCat oh no! thank god you brought this to my attention!
In any case, I’m sure your bitter, boring, unfunny commentary here will right the ship in no time. Just keep doing and saying the exact same thing every day, that way everyone will know that you’re a vibrant and creative individual human person, and not an algorithm that’s stuck in a 10 PRINT “AI” GARBAGE 20 GOTO 10 loop.
Go to a pawn shop and pay half that. And get something full-sized. How is the kid you’re buying this for (because it’s way too small for adult hands, or you’ll screw yourself in the future by having gotten accustomed to something tiny) supposed to extend their reach if they’re playing a miniature version?
If you hate your child, just say so. Save your 80 bucks.
Seriously though, buy a guitar you can actually tune. I have bought the 3/4 scale squiers and the short strings with standard tuners make it a nightmare of peg turning.
Zakk is so gentle w/ the little thing.
You’re right, tuning these guitars is a pain, and they seldom stay in tune for long.
Visit your local independent music store either way, since you’ll want to upgrade soon if you get this for your tiny tune trainee.
I have never seen one of these “Kid’s Guitars” that weren’t total garbage and more likely to kill a kid’s interest more than teach him something.
If you really want to get a kid a guitar look for one at local thrift stores (I LITERALLY picked up a Hondo from Salvation Army TODAY) or on eBay. Get a real guitar.
I see a lot of hate here for this guitar and I’m there for it too… unless you consider it a toy. Yes, an expensive toy, but a toy nevertheless. It’s undoubtedly made in China, which itself isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but at the $150+/- price point, I’m guessing its quality is meh at best. So here’s the tl;dr: if you want to a decent “starter” guitar, buy a used parlor guitar of a well-known brand (but not a top brand!) for $300 to $350.
@Pufferfishy bring up the timeless point I heard back in the 60s when I started with playing flute: cheaply-built instruments hinder a student’s progress and can put a big dent in their interest in playing.
So what do you do for a kid or a petite adult? Look for a decent used parlor guitar. They’re much less cumbersome than an “ordinary” (dreadnought) guitar; a parlor guitar’s body is smaller than a dreadnought, but the neck is the same length and maybe a bit more narrow. A parlor guitar’s body curves much more inward (a smaller waist) to make it easier to hold and handle. A decent one plays well and sounds good. I’m an average-sized guy with a big belly and I wouldn’t ever buy a dreadnought again. I have two Guild parlor guitars, an M-240E I bought new for $450 and an M-120e (my favorite!) I bought used for about the same price. Both are made in China, but the quality impressed my guitar instructor (a Berklee and Longy grad).
So, my advice is that once your kid is past the toy stage, save up your money and get a guitarist friend to help you find a decent used parlor guitar in the $300 to $350 range. And even if your kid decides to give up playing, a well-built guitar holds its price pretty well as it gets older and some of them even go up in value. (The Art & Lutherie dreadnought I bought about 25 years ago is nothing special, but it’s now worth more than what I paid for it.)
Specs
Product: Hola! Music 36" Acoustic Guitar Bundle for Beginners and Kids
Model: HG-36PK, HG-36LB, HG-36PP, HG-36SB
Condition: New
This kids guitar features a smooth spruce top with a mahogany back, sides, and neck. With a glossy finish and a rosewood fingerboard and bridge, it won’t just be the music that’s turning heads.
Our beginner guitars are a complete set! You’ll get a padded gig bag with a front compartment, backpack straps, and a handle, 3 picks in different sizes, a pick-guard, a hex key, and a strap.
This is the ultimate beginner guitar for kids and adults alike. It’s pre-strung with high-quality D’Addario EXP16 coated Phosphor Bronze strings. Just tune up and jam out!
The perfect kid guitar for little hands. At 3/4 the size, this HG-36SB small guitar is ideal for children aged 8-12, between 4’6" and 4’11" in height.
From starting students to shining shredders, our 3/4 guitar is a timeless present for any mini musician in your life. Get your children started early with this kids guitar for boys and girls!
What’s Included?
Price Comparison
$136.99-$173.99 at Amazon
Pink | Purple | Light Blue | Sunburst
Warranty
90 days
Estimated Delivery
Thursday, Aug 7 - Monday, Aug 11
Are you just stringing us along with this deal?
@yakkoTDI Tune in to find out!
@yakkoTDI No. I called you a tightly strung box plucker.
@phendrick @yakkoTDI why does this sound so offensive?
“AI” Garbage.
@DrunkCat I’m gonna start reporting spam
@DrunkCat @troy
As we head into the weekend
Our chores and games we will be sorting
While in the forums there are those who
To the bosses spam they will be reporting
@yakkoTDI lol okay mr. “incorrect fact”. bot some more
@troy still better than the spam of “AI” slop
@DrunkCat there are fun, engaging, intelligent and creative things to say about the downsides of using AI. Spend some time today trying to imagine what those things are! I believe you can do it!
@UncleVinny Did you miss like the whole first half of the year before yakkoTDI got caught using “AI” to make comments here?
@DrunkCat oh no! thank god you brought this to my attention!
In any case, I’m sure your bitter, boring, unfunny commentary here will right the ship in no time. Just keep doing and saying the exact same thing every day, that way everyone will know that you’re a vibrant and creative individual human person, and not an algorithm that’s stuck in a 10 PRINT “AI” GARBAGE 20 GOTO 10 loop.
@UncleVinny lol k
@DrunkCat @UncleVinny
I don’t.
I’ll make you a deal meh, sell me one for 50 and you can pick the color!
@bobthenormal Damn. These are so cheap that they left off one string.
3/4 size scale is a bitch to tune
@trailtroll
So is a 3/4 scale…
Lol, WHAT.
80 dollars for a child’s practice guitar?
Go to a pawn shop and pay half that. And get something full-sized. How is the kid you’re buying this for (because it’s way too small for adult hands, or you’ll screw yourself in the future by having gotten accustomed to something tiny) supposed to extend their reach if they’re playing a miniature version?
If you hate your child, just say so. Save your 80 bucks.
But Zakk Wylde can do it!
Seriously though, buy a guitar you can actually tune. I have bought the 3/4 scale squiers and the short strings with standard tuners make it a nightmare of peg turning.
You’re right, tuning these guitars is a pain, and they seldom stay in tune for long.
Visit your local independent music store either way, since you’ll want to upgrade soon if you get this for your tiny tune trainee.
I have never seen one of these “Kid’s Guitars” that weren’t total garbage and more likely to kill a kid’s interest more than teach him something.
If you really want to get a kid a guitar look for one at local thrift stores (I LITERALLY picked up a Hondo from Salvation Army TODAY) or on eBay. Get a real guitar.
I see a lot of hate here for this guitar and I’m there for it too… unless you consider it a toy. Yes, an expensive toy, but a toy nevertheless. It’s undoubtedly made in China, which itself isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but at the $150+/- price point, I’m guessing its quality is meh at best. So here’s the tl;dr: if you want to a decent “starter” guitar, buy a used parlor guitar of a well-known brand (but not a top brand!) for $300 to $350.
@Pufferfishy bring up the timeless point I heard back in the 60s when I started with playing flute: cheaply-built instruments hinder a student’s progress and can put a big dent in their interest in playing.
So what do you do for a kid or a petite adult? Look for a decent used parlor guitar. They’re much less cumbersome than an “ordinary” (dreadnought) guitar; a parlor guitar’s body is smaller than a dreadnought, but the neck is the same length and maybe a bit more narrow. A parlor guitar’s body curves much more inward (a smaller waist) to make it easier to hold and handle. A decent one plays well and sounds good. I’m an average-sized guy with a big belly and I wouldn’t ever buy a dreadnought again. I have two Guild parlor guitars, an M-240E I bought new for $450 and an M-120e (my favorite!) I bought used for about the same price. Both are made in China, but the quality impressed my guitar instructor (a Berklee and Longy grad).
So, my advice is that once your kid is past the toy stage, save up your money and get a guitarist friend to help you find a decent used parlor guitar in the $300 to $350 range. And even if your kid decides to give up playing, a well-built guitar holds its price pretty well as it gets older and some of them even go up in value. (The Art & Lutherie dreadnought I bought about 25 years ago is nothing special, but it’s now worth more than what I paid for it.)
Happy playing!