knucklehead
Active member
Beautiful! Pretty sure this means you either need a black on black tele, or a second cat that is somehow matches the current tele.
Do they MAKE a TV/blonde cat?
Beautiful! Pretty sure this means you either need a black on black tele, or a second cat that is somehow matches the current tele.
Gawd I love that seafoam Les Paul!!!Here's the rest of my heard. I like all them one way or another even though my playing is subpar.. Do not mind my organized chaos. I'm not a very organized in my personal life and I come to accept it.
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It had always been my dream to build a guitar. A few years ago, I found an ad for lutherie classes and signed up on a whim.
When I got there, the teacher asked us what type of guitar I'd like to build. I said a Les Paul. He told me it'd be way too hard for a first one. So I picked a Telecaster, but with Les Paul specs and a few embellishments: mahogany body, flame maple top, bird's eye maple neck, mirror pickguard, Bill Lawrence pickups and a custom wiring system that goes as such :
- neck
- neck & bridge in series
- neck & bridge in parallel
- out of phase
- bridge
It doesn't quite sound like a Telecaster or Les Paul, it's somewhere in between.
It took me close to two years to complete this project. I did most of the work myself – with the help of my teacher of course – apart from the fret leveling. I also sent it back to my luthier to slightly change the shape of the neck.
When I finally put it together and played it, it felt amazing! I was so relieved that it was in tune and sounded good.That's gotta feel amazing to have accomplished it like that, it looks gorgeous and I love your electronics setup!
I hear you. The great builders I’ve met have a « zen master » kind of attitude I wish I had. It comes - I think - with the knowledge that they know exactly what to do and what tool to use to do it.I can relate with rushing things, I stuff stuff up too often in my haste.
I have trouble completing pedal builds because I want everything a certain way.
Ironically, I set things aside when it isn't going to plan or waiting for the part that I've GOT TO have... and the build takes longer than if I just accepted a substitute part or not having every idea pan out. Hasty, but still taking ages to finish...
I'm assembling a partscaster — building one from scratch is a level beyond my ken, Bravo sir, Bravo.
A Tele with 24.75" neck, that's gotta be super-duper for string bends etc!
Fender's put out a few Teles over the years with Gibson neck length, I'd love to try one.
strap-on...er...oh my.
I hear you. I hope they are exceedingly skillful in their work.I've been playing bass a lot lately. With the shoulder surgery coming up next month I want to play as much as I can while I can!
Beautiful, hope you love at much as I do my PRS'sPRS 35th S2 C24 in Blue Smoke-burst [reverbish-echo effect]. 2nd pic is stock image. Apparently, they have a better camera phone than I do.
I've played this guitar a LOT in the few days that I've had it.....I...had to apologize to the others as they felt a little betrayed. My review is obviously subjective and focused on my tastes and preferences.
First impression it's very easy to handle. It has an interesting center of gravity that I am really liking. I mostly play seated, and have not yet tried it as a strap-on...er...oh my.
Anvil, My LP, is a lot of "junk in the trunk" and tends to roll off my leg, whereas Kermit (FS) is a tad top-heavy. This little fella rests just slightly forward while maintaining balance.
Controls Pretty straightforward stuff. Two mini-toggles for coil-splitting the 85/15s, V & T, and a 3-way. The dual coil-splitting covers a lot of tonal ground and I found playing through a single-channel no frills amp was helpful to familiarize myself with the guitar's responses with the least amount of influence on tone from the amp. (yes, I also shredded it through the Marshall stack).
They are positioned well enough, out of the way but in reach. I often ponder the roster of opinions that decide such things.
Playability I've just played the 10s that shipped with it, but for a virgin neck, the rosewood over mahogany flows pretty smoothly. I have grim reaper-like hands so I am fairly flexible with neck shape. Intonation was fairly close when on arrival and the mahogany-backed body resonates nicely.
Tuners They are at the far end of the guitar. I've only had to use one. Can you guess which one?
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That Precision is gorgeous, and that natural finish is just iconic for a 70's P in my mind. Stunning!As a long time amateur luthier, you'll have to excuse my indulgence of 3. Most sentimental- PRS inspired 5er built by one of my closest friends back in highschool 1999, I repaired it and changed it to fretless in 07 which is how I got into all this tinkering in the first place.
This led to my first scratch build, a redwood top baritone. Those GFS pseudo p90 pickups were place holders until I could afford something else but they actually sound excellent so they stay.
A decade ago a friend I used to support on upright at open mics handed me this 74 p bass and said "it belongs in your hands." Not sure if it's mine but it's probably my one... as much as I want that title to go to one of my own builds. This is the one you'd find in my hand while exiting a house fire.
It's definitely a good one. The dude bought it used in the late 70s and didn't really play it, sticking to mainly nylon guitar. I considered myself a j bass guy until the day I put flats on that p. My lust for a 60s j all but faded away. Kind of. A little....... There will surely be a physical altercation if he asks for it back at this point.That Precision is gorgeous, and that natural finish is just iconic for a 70's P in my mind. Stunning!
70's Precision headstock decals were also the best ever put on a guitar, and all others pale in comparison.
The Jazzmaster decal with the farting "F" might be second.