Ten bucks if you are lucky.
Actually ten bucks if you are extremely unlucky,probably somewhere between 100 and 500 dollars under normal circumstances,possibly up to several thousands of dollars if it turns out to be a quality instrument and lastly a one in a trillion chance (if you are the luckiest person on earth and it turned out to be one of the few actual Stradivari violins that are as of now unaccounted for )of it being worth as much as several million dollars.
As a trained violinmaker I can tell you that a real Stradivari violin,(of which most are accounted for) ,would be worth in the millions. That being said ,it is perfectly legal for any violinmaker to put a Stradivari label facsimile inside his instruments,(and MANY do)as long as they don't sell the instrument as the genuine article. I personally have seen thousands of violins of all quality with the exact label you discuss in them ,and since Antonio Stradivari only made about 600 instruments in his lifetime ,well.......
tengo un violínn que esta en la familia hace mas de 100 años, la etiqueta adentro dice ANTONIUS STRADIVARIUS CREMONENSIS FACIEBAT ANNO 1730 EL 30 ESTA ESCRITO A MANO es trucho o puede ser auténtico, es muy liviano y de muy buena terminación.
The chance of a "1713 Stradivarius" actually being just that is relatively slim. This is one instrument that has seen more counterfeits, copies and "tributes" than any other of fact or legend. That said, the highest price on record yet for a genuine Stradivarius was $3.5 million for a 1707 sold in 2006. Anything less than genuine generally wouldn't be worth ore than a few hundred dollars.
Ten bucks if it's in good condition. I have answered this question previoust in respect of Strad copies. Please refer.
Considering that Antonio Stradivari died in 1737, probably not much
i would buy it for 50 million dollars..thats including the original bow with it.
A genuine 1713 Stradivarius violin is worth millions of dollars, but all eight are accounted for.
A genuine Stradivari violin is worth millions. If you're asking about a violin you own on this site, you don't have a genuine Stradivari violin.
The Antonius Straduarius Cremona Faciebat Anno 1724 is a copy of the famous Antonius Stradivarius Cremona. The famous violin has many copies that are labeled with similar names to the originals.
$50
100,000
sounds like a replica so probably around $100 or less
A genuine Stradivarius cello would be worth millions, and you don't have one.
Simply a violin made in austria. One of a million copy of Stradivarius violin...
About $50
it is the birthplace of strdivarious violin....gwr
Someone that has lots of money and would maybe lease it bower it out to great or up coming violinist
It is impossible for even a luthier to value a violin based on a label because many of the cheapest violins tend to paste a Stradivarius or Guarnerius label in their violins in an attempt to increase the value. However, this violin is most likely not a true Stradivarius made by Antonius Stradivarius himself. In fact, you have a better chance of getting struck by lightning than finding a real Stradivarius.
Well, what about it? I can tell you that unless it says Antonius Stadovarius replica, that it is probably worth a lot of money. Maybe even up to $10,000 if it is in good condition. If it says on the label "Made in Czechoslovakia", then it is most definitely a fake. I'm actually inclined to believe that most if not all of these Antonius Stradivarius Cremonensis Faciebat Anno 17xx violins are fakes. --------- Most Stradivari labeled instruments are fake and a large percentage don't say copy of or replica. There are only about 500 of his instruments still in existence, so if yours is real it's probably stolen. David Lashof
In short, priceless. If this is a genuine Stradivari Violin, it will be worth well over $3,000,000 at auction, according to the research I've done due to having found one of these from my deceased grandparents, who themselves have had it in their family for over 160 years. The first thing you will need to do is to have it appraised and find out if it is indeed genuine. The problem is that almost all of the 600 or so instuments made by Antonio Stradivari are accounted for. That in combination with the fact that it is perfectly legal for any violinmaker to put a label like the one you mention inside his instruments ,as long as he doesn't try to sell the instrument as the genuine article,make it EXTREMELY unlikely that your violin is anything more than an instrument made "in the style of". That being said ,your viloin could still have substantial value.Many "copies" of Stradivari violins are themselves worth many thousands of dollars .The only way to tell for sure is to have a qualified luthier look at your instrument, again keeping in mind that the likelihood of it being a genuine Stradivari would something in the neighborhood of one in a Trillion.