Types of Classical and Spanish Guitars You Should Know

Understanding the different types of classical guitars prevents mistakes when selecting the right instrument for your level. In our Muro de Alcoy workshop, we construct instruments carefully tailored to distinct technical abilities and performance styles.
Not knowing how tonewoods or neck dimensions affect playability often leads to buying a guitar that is uncomfortable and structurally imprecise. Before choosing, it is essential to consider your academic level, your physical frame, and the musical genre you wish to master.
Classes of Classical Guitars by Level
The Alhambra Guitarras catalog is systematically organized according to the player's technical advancement, altering the selection of tonewoods and internal fan bracing. Each academic milestone demands a unique acoustic response to nurture the guitarist's technique and auditory development.
1. Student Range: Ideal for Beginners
Our entry-level models are engineered to allow beginners to tackle their first scales with absolute physical comfort. Our luthiers set a low string action to minimize finger fatigue, and we use solid wood soundboards to deliver a rich, resonant tone from the very first chord.
To explore our entry-level models, please visit this link: Classical guitars for beginners
2. Conservatory and Concert Ranges: For Advanced Development
Advanced students and concert performers require a superior range of tonal colors and dynamic nuances for complex repertoire. For these premium ranges, we select noble, highly aged tonewoods, sculpting every single detail by hand using traditional luthier techniques.
Discover our advanced instruments here: Conservatory classical guitars and Concert level classical guitars.
3. Professional and Luthier Models: The Pinnacle of Excellence
For guitarists who dedicate their lives to music and seek a truly unique sonic identity, this level represents the ultimate expression of our workshop's craft.
Our professional models feature meticulous construction optimized for maximum projection and reliability on stage. Meanwhile, our Luthier guitars are conceived as strictly individual masterworks. Crafted from rare, collector-grade tonewoods seasoned for decades, they are finished with traditional hand-rubbed French polish (shellac). The results are instruments of unparalleled acoustic depth, perfect balance, and profound maturity.
Explore these works of art at the following links: Professional classical guitars and Luthier classical guitars.
Types of Spanish Guitars by Design
Driven by structural innovation, we offer ergonomic variations from the traditional classical build to meet the demands of live performers or musicians shifting from other genres.
Cutaway Models for High-Register Melodies
Our Cutaway guitars feature an elegant body cutout that allows effortless access to the upper frets. Ideal for solos and contemporary compositions, our craftsmen precisely tune the body design to preserve a perfectly balanced projection.
For example:

Crossover Models for Modern Musicians
The Crossover guitar series delivers an ergonomic hybrid design tailored for steel-string or electric guitarists. Featuring a narrower, slightly radiused neck for fluid chording, it blends modern playability with the acoustic warmth of nylon strings.
For example:

Technical Comparison: Guitar Designs and Ergonomics
To aid your decision-making, here are the core technical specifications of our instruments handcrafted in Spain. The table outlines nut width, fingerboard profile, and ideal performance applications.
|
Guitar Type |
Nut Width |
Fingerboard Profile |
Standard Finish |
Primary Use |
|
Traditional Student |
Fifty-two millimeters |
Classic flat |
Satin or gloss |
Beginner academic learning |
|
Hybrid Crossover |
Forty-eight millimeters |
Slightly radiused (curved) |
Gloss |
Modern genres & live stage |
|
Modern Cutaway |
Fifty-two millimeters |
Classic flat |
Gloss |
Solos and high-register performance |
Frequently Asked Questions - FAQs
What are the primary types of classical guitars?
They are categorized into Student, Conservatory, and Concert/Luthier models based on their construction tier. Design variants include Cutaway guitars for smooth access to high notes, and Crossover guitars featuring narrower necks for multi-genre musicians.
Why do classical guitars have wider necks?
The traditional 52 mm nut width provides the essential spacing required for classical fingerstyle technique. This design guarantees clean left-hand placement, preventing fingertips from accidentally muting adjacent strings during complex chord variations.
What type of strings are used on a classical guitar?
They use exclusively nylon strings, which deliver a smooth feel and the signature warm resonance of the classical Spanish guitar. Putting steel strings on these instruments would exert excessive tension on the bridge, permanently warping the solid wood top.
Are smaller-sized classical guitars available?
Yes, we build fractionally scaled guitars in 1/2, 3/4, and 7/8 sizes designed specifically for younger learners. They preserve our signature artisan construction quality, helping students maintain a correct and healthy playing posture from day one.
Choose the Perfect Companion for Your Musical Journey
A guitarist’s progress develops naturally when the instrument aligns with their physical needs and stylistic ambitions. The historic expertise of our luthiers in Muro de Alcoy ensures you select the perfect medium to express yourself freely.
We invite you to explore our full guitar catalog to examine every specification, from our introductory studio models to our signature masterworks. Purchase your instrument with absolute peace of mind, fully backed by the authorized technical support network that defines Alhambra Guitarras.
Pictured above: JULIA TRINTSCHUK performing with her Deseada masterwork guitar by Javier Mengual.









