igorthebarbarian
Well-known member
It's a baby! Wow, it's tiny but adorable. It's like a midget uke. The Ohana sopranissimo, the Ohana O'Nino.
MIM got a whole bunch of them sent out and I was on the pre-order list. As always, MIM has done a great setup and delivered with quick, safe shipping.
These O'Nino's are definitely cute and worth the small investment for a pretty rare-sized uke. Also, given its small stature, it would make a great travel uke.
Note, it doesn't fit in the Sopranino hard case because of the geared tuners. I think it would though if you had friction tuners. I think the geared tuners here are good quality and seem to hold tuning well/ turn easily. It's not super head-heavy either.
The uke is small. I have attached a photo in here of the sopranissimo O'Nino on the left, the SK-21A sopranino cedar top, and a Famous Soprano uke.
If you ever wanted the Soprano to feel like a Tenor or a Baritone, go play a Sopranissimo or Sopranino. I have fairly small hands so I can play the new O'Nino pretty easily. It's definitely tight though and I wouldn't recommend it for anyone with big fingers/ big hands/ big fingertips. Definitely would be awesome for kids looking to get into the ukulele.
The first thing I did was swap out the Aquila strings for my favored Worth Brown's. I had a set of Browns that I had taken off another Soprano, that I had kept in anticipation (also helped that they were already pre-stretched a bit). You can see in one of the photos the extra length leftover compared to the normal Soprano string length.
Also, I tuned mine up to E tuning. Regular C would be too floppy and D tuning seemed too low too. I had it all the way up to F briefly (CFAD) but dialed it back a half-step. It seems to be a good tuning for such a short scale.
But I would like to know if that E tuning is too high? It doesn't feel like it but if someone can let me know, or do the math, that'd be great. Thanks!
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MIM got a whole bunch of them sent out and I was on the pre-order list. As always, MIM has done a great setup and delivered with quick, safe shipping.
These O'Nino's are definitely cute and worth the small investment for a pretty rare-sized uke. Also, given its small stature, it would make a great travel uke.
Note, it doesn't fit in the Sopranino hard case because of the geared tuners. I think it would though if you had friction tuners. I think the geared tuners here are good quality and seem to hold tuning well/ turn easily. It's not super head-heavy either.
The uke is small. I have attached a photo in here of the sopranissimo O'Nino on the left, the SK-21A sopranino cedar top, and a Famous Soprano uke.
If you ever wanted the Soprano to feel like a Tenor or a Baritone, go play a Sopranissimo or Sopranino. I have fairly small hands so I can play the new O'Nino pretty easily. It's definitely tight though and I wouldn't recommend it for anyone with big fingers/ big hands/ big fingertips. Definitely would be awesome for kids looking to get into the ukulele.
The first thing I did was swap out the Aquila strings for my favored Worth Brown's. I had a set of Browns that I had taken off another Soprano, that I had kept in anticipation (also helped that they were already pre-stretched a bit). You can see in one of the photos the extra length leftover compared to the normal Soprano string length.
Also, I tuned mine up to E tuning. Regular C would be too floppy and D tuning seemed too low too. I had it all the way up to F briefly (CFAD) but dialed it back a half-step. It seems to be a good tuning for such a short scale.
But I would like to know if that E tuning is too high? It doesn't feel like it but if someone can let me know, or do the math, that'd be great. Thanks!
View attachment 92169View attachment 92170View attachment 92171