When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: harps for sale near me

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lyon & Healy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyon_&_Healy

    Lyon and Healy now primarily manufactures four types of harps—the lever harp, petite pedal harp, semi-grande pedal harp, and concert grand harp. They also make limited numbers of special harps called concert grands. Lyon & Healy makes electric lever harps in nontraditional colors such as pink, green, blue, and red.

  3. Harps Food Stores - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harps_Food_Stores

    Harps Food Stores was founded by Harvard and Floy Harp in 1930. [5] In 2001, Harps became employee-owned after buying company shares from the Harp family. The stores are supplied by Kansas City, Kansas-based Associated Wholesale Grocers. [6] The company is valued around $550 million, and employed 5,300 people as of 2020. [7]

  4. Lucky's Market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucky's_Market

    Bo and Trish Sharon bought the remaining 7 stores in late January 2020., [49] which quickly changed to 6 stores a week later with the announced sale of the Melbourne, Florida, store. [46] The remaining four stores outside of Colorado were sold off by the Sharon's before the end of the first quarter of 2020.

  5. Salvi Harps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvi_Harps

    A Salvi double-action concert harp. Salvi is one of the most important manufacturers of high-quality harps. [1] About 90 employees make about 2,000 harps a year from spruce and maple wood, about half of which are concert (double action) harps, and the remaining lever and electroacoustic harps.

  6. Victor Salvi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_Salvi

    Victor Salvi was born into an Italian family and was the youngest child of Rodolfo Salvi and Apollonia Paoliello. Rodolfo was himself a musician and an instrument maker from Venice, who moved to the small Southern village of Viggiano, Basilicata, land of travelling musicians who brought their music and traditions all over the world, as well as known for the construction of harps.

  7. African harp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_harp

    The oldest depictions of harps in Africa date back to the 4th Dynasty of Egypt (around 2500 BC). They represent the already fully developed type of bowed harp with a short spade or shovel-shaped resonance box, which presumably dates back to the 1st dynasty (beginning of the 3rd millennium) and is an independent Egyptian development. [3]