![]() ![]() However, the fastest thing I found was to locate a high resolution shot of a guitar fretboard via Google images. Download the image, then edited to tweak the brightness and contrast, crop as needed as offered under Microsoft Office Picture Manager. ![]() Under Paint, you can pull the image in from 'paste from' and then add the strings if these are missing in the photo. Once there, you can copy the element several times to fill the page. Then add markers for your scales or chords and save by scale name, such as E minor Pentatonic. ![]() Here is an example as used with Microsoft Office Picture Manager and Paint. You can easily download these images by right clicking and select "save as". UPDATE (Append): If you have a decent digital camera, take a picture of your own fretboard, transfer to your computer and use what ever picture editor you have to crop and enhance. You won't have to draw the strings in and you are pretty much ready to have a template to start drawing your scales, or chords in.We have now covered 4 of the examples I plan to review on how to get music images into blogs and documents. Create a finger diagram of the note positions for a C major scale placed in the cAged position on the guitar.Create a chord diagram of a C major guitar chord played as a bar at the third fret.Create the standard notation of a C major scale (not tab) and an image for embedding.Create a high quality image of the tab + standard notation.Create a high quality image of the tab which can be put anywhere.Put the guitar tab of a C major scale into HTML for a blog.This is Part 3 in my series Musical Snippets for Sharing. This post will cover the last two examples – fret diagrams.Īnyone who plays a fretted instrument has encountered chord diagrams. Chord diagrams visually illustrate where to put your fingers on the frets. Although the same information is conveyed by TAB, the chord diagram is closer to a picture of how to play the chord. In fact, some books of chords just show photographs of someone playing each chord. The 6th example I want to cover is a scale diagram. It shows all the finger positions that will be used to play a scale or lick or other short piece – usually only a bar or two in length. It is different from a chord diagram only because each string may show more than one finger position. It conveys less information than the TAB for the same lick because the diagram does not show the sequence the notes are played in. It is used less frequently than chord diagrams but might still be useful as supplemental information to playing a lick with unusual or difficult finger positions. I like scale/lick diagrams as a supplement to TAB or standard notation because they prepare me for what is coming. Use Lilypond notation software directly.Create diagrams with graphics software.Use chord diagram software such as QwikChord3.Use TuxGuitar to create and save chord diagrams.Where do my fingers go next? The diagrams show me. Use TuxGuitar to create and save chord diagrams. Most tab creation software allows you to create chord diagrams and insert the diagrams above the music notation and tab. TuxGuitar is typical with a chord library of chord forms you can choose from. However, you can also just enter the finger positions on the chord diagram. ![]()
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