For the guitar nuts: I could never afford a custom made guitar. They are crazy-expensive. One day, visiting Mark Johnson's (MJ Guitars) shop behind a music store, I was going through his scrap bin and I found this blue metal-flake painted guitar body. I asked him "What's wrong with this?" He said it was a bass guitar body routed for strat style pickups and he tossed it because nobody wanted it. We got to talking and in the end I got the body and all the hardware for it in exchange for me faux-finish painting about a half dozen guitar bodies for him. In addition he'd clear coat this body after I painted it. You can't see it in this photo but up close this finish has several shades of blue and violet sponge-painted over the blue metal flake, with flecks of gold running through it. I looks like a block of lapis lazuli. The excellent neck, made by local luthier Jim Surles (in exchange for painting a couple of guitars) is unfinished maple (except for the front of the headstock) and has an ebony fretboard. Locking Spurtzel tuners, graphite nut, EMG pickups, active humbucker at the bridge and a Kahler trem (which I'm not crazy about). Jim assembled it and did all the set up for me. A custom guitar made by two different custom guitar makers! All I had to do is paint some guitars, which isn't exactly a piece of cake, but I can come up with a really good custom paint job easier than I can come up with the money for a custom made guitar. This thing rocks like a Mo Fo!
Monday, July 22, 2013
Guitar case project: finished
For the guitar nuts: I could never afford a custom made guitar. They are crazy-expensive. One day, visiting Mark Johnson's (MJ Guitars) shop behind a music store, I was going through his scrap bin and I found this blue metal-flake painted guitar body. I asked him "What's wrong with this?" He said it was a bass guitar body routed for strat style pickups and he tossed it because nobody wanted it. We got to talking and in the end I got the body and all the hardware for it in exchange for me faux-finish painting about a half dozen guitar bodies for him. In addition he'd clear coat this body after I painted it. You can't see it in this photo but up close this finish has several shades of blue and violet sponge-painted over the blue metal flake, with flecks of gold running through it. I looks like a block of lapis lazuli. The excellent neck, made by local luthier Jim Surles (in exchange for painting a couple of guitars) is unfinished maple (except for the front of the headstock) and has an ebony fretboard. Locking Spurtzel tuners, graphite nut, EMG pickups, active humbucker at the bridge and a Kahler trem (which I'm not crazy about). Jim assembled it and did all the set up for me. A custom guitar made by two different custom guitar makers! All I had to do is paint some guitars, which isn't exactly a piece of cake, but I can come up with a really good custom paint job easier than I can come up with the money for a custom made guitar. This thing rocks like a Mo Fo!
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