What do you mean by pianist fingers exactly? When I think that, I'm thinking long fingers with control.
What else could effect the hands? growing up as a videogame vegetable, typing lessons... 12 years of guitar. I've heard gardening is a good workout for the hands.
I think I was born with pianist fingers. At a very young age I could play very fast without any technical instruction at all and it surprised the heck out of my teacher. I'm not talking about Martha Argerich type speed, just way faster than most kids.
Able to move them. Use of the hands. Not being clumsy with the hands.
Under complete control - fingers can work independetly but in a synchronized way.
Well...one could put it like that. Abnormally long fingers. I'm not sure what you mean by "with control", however.G.W.K
I think you can have the long fingers look. Part of that is just being able to extend your fingers and then having the bones in your hand stand out a little. They appear longer.
I personally dont think they exist at all. Piano playing happens in your brains, there are enough Masters who have fingers like sausages to support my statement.
It's like athletics, some people are born with a natural abilty to co-ordinate, and to move at speeds. Then some of these have musical abilty, and then some of them get good teachers and they become good pianists if they work hard. Some people have clumsy hands, and tension is everywhere. These will never be pianists
Clumsy hands/tension is something you learn to control with piano playing. But controlling that clumsyness happens in the brains, wich is THE difference with athletics.
You can control them, but you can't control them over your limits. Pushing those limits is having pianist's fingers. And it's not like being born to play the piano, it's simply a hand type that randomly fits better than others to play the piano, because of the way it's made, as simple as that.
If that was true, all grand masters would have that same hand type.... Wich is obviously not the case.I would maybe even go so far to say that i think you dont even need talent for playing the piano. I think it all depends on the right external factors, like stimulating parents, lots of classical background music and a teacher fit to that child.
Did I say only one hand type fitted the keyboard? Of course not. There are many types of hands who can fit very well to a keyboard. And not all the great masters had amazing virtuosic abilities, and they did not all find technique easy. Yes you can learn with any pair of hands to play piano well or even be a great, but the technical part can be easier for certain persons with luckily suited hands(that's definitely not only one hand type, obviously).