

Two Strings Togetherįingerpicking doesn’t mean that you’re limited to picking just one string at a time. To me this pattern sounds more like a guitar being picked than any of the others. It may seem a little counter intuitive at first as you’re not simply picking up and down the strings in a visual manner but it will quickly become second nature. This is probably one of my most used fingerpicking patterns. If you’re using a three finger picking style like I do then you’ll be picking this way: thumb (C), index (E), thumb (G), middle (A), thumb (G), index (E). This makes our pattern pick the strings in this order C, E, G, A, G, E. Personally I prefer to use the three finger picking style as I find it a little easier. I’m going to give you the option of using either a three finger picking style (like we used in the claw) or a four finger picking style to pick this one. This time we’re deliberately aiming to pick from the lowest open string to the highest open string. You may be thinking that we’ve already been picking in a linear fashion but this one is a little different. Our fourth pattern uses a linear picking approach.

If you’re not used to using your ring finger much then this may take a little practice but it will develop with time. That means we’re picking the strings from the string closest to the ceiling as you hold the ukulele down to the string closest to the floor and then back up again. The actual pattern here is very simple, knowing that each finger is sticking to the string it’s been assigned to we’re just going to pick thumb, index, middle, ring, middle, index. This will teach you where your fingers should be in order to pick this pattern. Thumb gets the G string, index gets the C string, middle finger gets the E string and ring finger gets the A string.Ī good place to start with this one is simple to place your fingers on those strings and get comfortable with that position. The easiest way to think of the four finger picking pattern is that each finger takes responsibility for a string. In the third pattern we’re introducing our ring finger in and shifting the focus a little. When it comes to fingerpicking, slow and steady wins the race Four Fingers

It adds a little more texture to your playing. Of course, this is just the starting point and you don’t necessarily need to start out on the G string, you could start with the C string.Īs you play this one, notice the extra depth that plucking the C string brings. This time the picking order is thumb (G), index (E), middle (A), index (E), thumb (C), index (E), middle (A), index (E).Įssentially this is just the claw pattern above played twice but the second time we’re playing through it we’re using our thumb on the C string rather than the G. I don’t like to refer to it as travis picking on ukulele as the re-entrant tuning means you’re not actually picking only bass notes. Travis picking for those that don’t know is a guitar technique which uses your thumb to alternate picking on the bass strings of the guitar. If you’re coming from a guitar background then this is essentially a form of Travis picking. Our thumb now is now tasked with covering both the G and the C string. The second pattern that we’re looking at take the claw pattern above and makes our thumb work a little bit harder. Once you’re feeling a little more comfortable you can start to add a single chord in before progressing to multiple chords. Just fingerpick the open strings until you start to get comfortable. If you’re new to fingerpicking completely, don’t worry about chords at all. The order that I’m picking the strings in is thumb (G), index (E), middle (A), index (E).Īfter this you can either switch chords or pick the same sequence again. We’re leaving the C string completely unplayed (for now).

In this first pattern we’re plucking the G string with our thumb, the E string with our index finger and the A string with our middle finger. It only uses your thumb, index and middle fingers which is a nice introduction to fingerpicking without pushing too far. The claw is probably the easiest fingerpicking pattern to get used to.
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We’re just aiming to focus on your picking hand so feel free to use whatever works best for you. You don’t need to use the same chords as me, this lesson isn’t about your fretting hand. In this lesson I look at 5 fingerpicking patterns that you can use as a starting point to move your fingerpicking skills forwards.īefore we get started, the chords I’m using in the video to demo these fingerpicking patterns are C, Cmaj7, C7, F, G7 and back to C. Moving from strumming to fingerpicking is when you know that you’re starting to get a little bit more serious with ukulele.
