Flute Vendors
Stay tuned for the vendor list for 2025
Rainbow Music
Brent Adams
I became interested in the NAS Flute after being a guitar player from my early teens. After really listening to a CD that I bought to use as background music for an event, I was hooked. Then it took me 8 years of trial and error to find a flute that sounded musical!
Rainbow Music is what I call my store (booth and online) where I sell NAS Flutes I've created, since 2009. I have a few High Spirits Flutes available from being a small dealer for them, as well as Breath Flutes and NanoDidge (a travel style didgeridoo). I sell T-shirts (my own designs), my 12 different albums on CD (a few digital download cards also available), AND a selection of Pre-Loved Flutes from my personal collection.
Little Raven Flutes
Jeremy Baer
Coming Soon
Albatroz Flutes
Altazor Bifani
Hi! I am Altazor, a French-Chilean flute maker residing on Kalapuya land. I started making flutes 5 years ago with Miguel Medina from Singing Tree Flutes, who became my mentor and dear friend. I am now on my own path exploring new esthetics and tunings and getting to share my own voice. Knowing that my flutes are out in the world being played and loved is an honor and a great gift! I look forward to my first Flutestock!
Custom Flute Shop
Jeff Calavan
"Welcome to the Custom Flute Shop, where I like to say, ‘anything is possible.’ I’m Jeff Calavan (aka Laughing Mallard) and I have been crafting custom Native American-Style flutes for over 30 years. My wife JoAnn and I owned and operated the Oregon Flute Store for 27 years, before selling the business to Jonny and Maria Lipford in 2023.
I understand what flute players like and what they want in a flute. So, if you’re looking for your dream flute designed to fit your personality and playing style, look me up. I do NOT create production flutes. I work on only one flute at a time. I look forward to seeing you all at Flutestock 2024."
Jeff will also sell handmade knives at his flute booth.
GreyWolf Flutes
Larry Gralnick
Larry Gralnik, aka Tahoe Larry, is the maker of GreyWolf Flutes. He's been making flutes most of his adult life. He started with only hand tools and grandfather tuning, eventually moving into building the contemporary flutes we know today. He's now making flutes out of yucca, wood, bamboo/cane, and branches. He's new to Flutestock vending, and says "I look forward to meeting everyone there."
Moon Kat Flutes
Mike Kapsimalis
Moon Kat Flutes, based in White Salmon, WA, offers Native American-style flutes tuned to various scales from around the world. The flutes are mainly Pacific Northwest sustainable hardwoods, as well as natural branch and elderberry stem flutes.
Mike says:
"I started my flute journey 9 years ago when I received my first flute from Miguel Medina of Singing Tree Flutes. For the past 4 years I have been an apprentice with Miguel, and now also create my own line of flutes and other artisanal offerings.
My flutes range from small higher tunings all the way to larger contrabass ones, single barrel to triple drones!”
You can find Mike on Instagram @moonkatflutes or check out his website: www.moonkatflutes.com.
Joe Loftin Flutes
Joe Loftin
An award-winning flute maker based in the Missouri Ozarks, Joe got his first flute as a gift in 2009.
"By the time I acquired my third flute, I realized I was going to want more. But they were kind of expensive," Joe says. "It occurred to me that if I could make my own flutes it could save me a lot of money."
One day John Suttles, Joe's flute making guru, showed him an oval bore flute. "I played it and thought it had a wonderful sound."
So, Joe experimented with making one. He found that his oval bores outperformed his round flutes, with stronger voices and better tone quality. So for the past few years, that's what he's been making.
Flutes by Nash
Nash Tavewa
Nash is a member of the Bene Xidza (people of the clouds) or more modernly known as “Zapotec.” He comes from a long lineage of master ceramic artists in traditional Zapotec pottery.
He also apprenticed with Maestro Guillermo Martinez, where he learned the art of Native American-style wooden flute and drum making. Over many years of refining his skills working with both clay and wood, Nash has become a world-renowned instrument maker.
Nash has great appreciation for his Zapotec heritage with its rich culture, traditions, ceremonies, dances, and music. He seeks to preserve and share this ancient knowledge. He's returning to Flutestock after a gap of several years.