For sale in my area, Super-Maxima-A, special edition, very rare specimen! B-griff so the seller has trouble finding buyers. I am trying to get the price down. 6 treble rows, 140 bass. One of the heaviest Dallapé ever built.
Just a word of caution:One of the heaviest Dallapé ever built.
That site is created by "Accordions Worldwide", not by Dallapè. The name should at least be spelled correctly in the lettering of any real Dallapè accordion. (I have noticed that Italians themselves pay little attention to the direction of accents in their writing, unlike the French.)... I note that - while I surely believe you to be correct- that https://www.dallape-accordions.com/history.htm has it both ways! The incorrect tilt outnumbers the correct one three to one!
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Paul, your assertion has truly surprised me, as I can't remember ever seeing the accent sloped this way regarding this name.First of all, it's Dallapè, not Dallapé.
For sale in my area, Super-Maxima-A, special edition, very rare specimen! B-griff so the seller has trouble finding buyers. I am trying to get the price down. 6 treble rows, 140 bass. One of the heaviest Dallapé ever built.
It would be awesome to see inside the accordion too... but really perhaps the best way to know that this is the real deal is to actually play the accordion. If it sounds totally gorgeous... it's a Dallapè.
The seller says it's SLAVONKA which is the place where the original owner comes from. The accordion was custom made.BTW: it would be interesting to find out the name that's written on the grille in Swarovski crystal beneath the Balkan eagle. Could this be the name of its original owner?
Not according to its webpage.First of all, it's Dallapè, not Dallapé. (Nitpicking here.)
More and more mysterious !Not according to its webpage.
BTW, OB, did you go for it?For sale in my area, Super-Maxima-A, special edition