Fin-Der
George A. Finder and Nino Marcelli set up a Plastic Ukulele manufacturing company in San Diego in 1950. The most famous branded product was the Diamond Head. Finder owned the patents for the design, even if production is credited to a plastic factory, and it was used on a lot of other brands of Ukulele over the next decade The ones I have seen were predominantly white fronted with a coloured, often faux wood sort of marbled brown, back and sides. Some were entirely faux wood and some particularly the Royal Hawaiians had a painted black fretboard. There were only ever Sopranos made and it should be remembered that this was the first plastic Ukulele, production was started before Maccaferri and Finder got his patent 3 months before Maccaferri (these facts were a large part of Chris Kratt/Emenees defence in the patent court cases with Maccaferri) Distinctive on a Fin-Der Ukulele are the circular headstock logo, (it might say something different but its always circular and in the same place), the tuning pegs, the bridge and the moulding where the fret board meets the body; also no zero fret, (zero fret means Maccaferri). Another thing is about the manufacturing, but you don't see this without taking them apart, the Finder models are a two part process whereas the Emenee has four and Maccaferri's are an eight part process. Other Fin-Der (hyphen to differentiate from Fender) designed Ukuleles I have seen are are
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