Well, it seems like eons since i have built on anything...Guess maybe that's because it HAS been a while
Been looking around and I really don't have all that many guitars around any more that are ready to go, and most of what I do have are quite old. And we have another show next weekend and all of the guitars that I have on hand have already been there....twice. And since I have gotten some advance publicity
http://www.lakecountryjournal.com/emag/ ... eflip.html I better get something new to take along. (Note: if you go to this link, click the pages icon in the upper left and scroll down to page 34 and click on it)
So the one I have the closest to being finished is this monkeypod dread. Box is all closed and the neck is mostly shaped with the fingerboard and peghead overlay all glued on. Just needs binding, fretting, neck carving, finishing and stringing up.
So first I did the end graft, simple ebony with b/w lines that will match the binding that I plan to use
You can see I have the binding channels routed and ready to go. I also have a bunch of dred bent binding in ebony with b/w purflings
Here is the first one going on the back
And here is the whole thing all done
I used a w/b purfling on the top and no purfling on the back, but when I scraped the bindings down, there were a few places where the white purfling line on the top "got lost"
So I painted on some warm water to get the glue softened (I used Elmer's Carpenter's Glue) and scraped out those sections with a real skinny chisel. Cleaned out the groove and glued in new strips. I cut the ends of the bad sections as a ramp so the new pieces would scarf on rather than being a butt joint which would show.
And here is the result...
...good as new.
Then I radiused and fretted the fingerboard.
This is a nicely quartersawn cocobolo fingerboard. I get the board dead flat and then I hammer in the frets. After the third fret is in, I check everything as I go with a short straightedge across the last three frets, and hammer down any that the straightedge rocks on. So when I get done there is almost no leveling to do.
Then I routed the peghead for my logo and glued it in
And sanded everything level
I am going to French polish the body and use Tru-Oil on the neck
Dennis brought me the booze last week and my shellac came today
Mixed up a small batch of the amber and the platina tonight to a one pound cut, so I should be set to go this weekend
Here is a shot of the front...
...and the back
These look blotchy because I have a partly sanded coat of shellac on to protect the wood. I will sand everything down to bare wood before I start to finish.
Here is the neck with the first coat of Tru-Oil
Notice that I have the back sanded down.
So that's where I am for today. I need to make the bridge and get the finishing going tomorrow. Hope I can remember Mitch's instructions
G