Finished! Burl Maple SG
Posted: Wed Oct 02, 2013 3:30 pm
Hi
Sorry it's been a while. Started a new job at work...really gets in the way of the important things like guitar building
In between times, I've been busy making an SG tribute for our old-blokes-band's bassist.
It's mahogany back, burl maple top, mahogany/walnut/mahogany neck and ebony fingerboard. I'm also doing it as a thru neck. When I get a moment, I'll post some of the build photos, but just in case anyone is interested, has anyone else used standard fountain pen ink as a stain?
I've used it a few times and it beats all other stained finishes hands down!
Modern cameras struggle with red, so I've had to tweak the white balance. but this is getting close to how it looks:
In real life it is much more blood-red...it looks fabulous. Just ink applied with a cloth and standard hardware store varnish, thinned with white spirit and hand-wiped with a microfibre cloth.
I've also done a faux binding which adds a bit of definition to the join:
I'll try to post some shots of how the back is progressing
Sorry it's been a while. Started a new job at work...really gets in the way of the important things like guitar building
In between times, I've been busy making an SG tribute for our old-blokes-band's bassist.
It's mahogany back, burl maple top, mahogany/walnut/mahogany neck and ebony fingerboard. I'm also doing it as a thru neck. When I get a moment, I'll post some of the build photos, but just in case anyone is interested, has anyone else used standard fountain pen ink as a stain?
I've used it a few times and it beats all other stained finishes hands down!
Modern cameras struggle with red, so I've had to tweak the white balance. but this is getting close to how it looks:
In real life it is much more blood-red...it looks fabulous. Just ink applied with a cloth and standard hardware store varnish, thinned with white spirit and hand-wiped with a microfibre cloth.
I've also done a faux binding which adds a bit of definition to the join:
I'll try to post some shots of how the back is progressing