Mya-Moe Ukuleles

Mya-Moe Ukuleles, LLC is an American ukulele manufacturing company established in 2008. The company's original headquarters and primary workshop were in White Salmon, Washington.[1] The current headquarters and workshop are in Glenview, Illinois, just north of Chicago.

Mya-Moe
LLC
IndustryMusical instruments
Founded2008 (2008) in White Salmon, Washington
FounderGordon and Char Mayer
Headquarters,
Key people
Cary Kelly (owner)
ProductsUkuleles
Websitemyamoeukuleles.com

History

Mya-Moe Ukuleles was founded in 2008 by Gordon and Char Mayer, husband and wife luthiers. In 2018, company ownership and operations transitioned to Cary Kelly who continued to build Mya-Moe Ukuleles using the original designs and processes. Ukuleles are primarily sold direct to consumer via the company web store rather than through a retail shop or dealers. Mya-Moe Ukuleles has a reputation for making quality instruments with configurable components.

Instruments

Traditional model: tenor ukulele in mahogany

Mya-Moe ukuleles have been built from over 20 woods including traditional koa as well as myrtlewood (Umbellularia) found only in the local southern Oregon and northern Californian coasts.

Mya-Moe Ukuleles are available in five different sizes;: soprano, super soprano, concert, tenor and baritone.

Once the building process begins on an instrument, daily progress can be viewed on the UkeTracker page of the Mya-Moe website as photos are taken for each step.[2]

Endorsements

Mya-Moe has created more than 2500 ukuleles for amateur and professional musicians around the world, including Eddie Vedder,[3] Dave Matthews, Mumford & Sons,[4] Trey Anastasio (Phish), Ben Harper, Florence + the Machine, James Hill,[5] Victoria Vox, and The Decemberists.[6]

gollark: It appears that you can mostly avoid such things here, but there are an unreasonably large amount of universities and I still have not decided between maths and computer science or physics.
gollark: Find easy ones?
gollark: Can you just *mostly* ignore them?
gollark: Do you know to what extent you can entirely ignore the boring classes?
gollark: I mean sociology in the general sense of any non-maths subject.

References

  1. Oregon Music News Archived 2010-04-19 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Clark, Jack. "Using the Internet to Increase Customer Satisfaction: A Case Study on the Evolution of Mya-Moe Ukuleles." Guitarmaker Magazine Summer 2011: 34-36. print.
  3. Hood River Buzz
  4. "Mumford & Sons: God, Beer & Banjos." Rolling Stone Magazine 4 August 2011: 50. print.
  5. James Hill's slide ukulele
  6. Ukulele Hunt interview with Gordon Mayer
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