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| Tele Home Depot Building a T-Style guitar? From scratch or from parts. This is the forum for you. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: corona, CA
Posts: 263
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.retsaceleT
Hey! Long time lurker, first time posting... I'm gonna try to make my intro here quick, then get on with the retsaceleT.
I JUST started building guitars maybe 3 or 4 months ago. I saw a guy on this forum build one out of a 4x4, and something snapped! I took savings I had for a Jazzmaster, and ended up buying a router and drill press instead. My first body was okay, but I sold it and tried to do a better one. Same story for my next 2 or 3... Next thing I knew, I was making and selling them to every musician I know, to buy new tools so I could make even more! Somewhere along the way, I wanted to build a left handed guitar that I could play upside-down, like so many great guitarists have. I wanted the upside down guitar to be a real statement about my taste in music; I'm not a shredder, and I wanted a body that would be IMPOSSIBLE to reach the high notes. So I made templates by tracing my G&L Asat Classic... I got some ash boards on eBay for dirt cheap and ended up doing 2 builds simultaneously, so you'll see a Jag Stang hanging out with this guitar in some pics... ![]() Hmmm... I seem to have lost a lot of the pics of this process... anyways, I flipped the body template to make it left handed, but I kept the pickup and control template in the right handed orientaiton. I did this build before I learned about forstner bits, so it was hogged out poorly with a regular drill bit... ![]() Here it is all cut out (next to a walnut Les Paul type body I made). ![]() And here next to that Jag stang... ![]() I got her all sealed up: ![]() And started primering it in thin coats. ![]() Then the Duplicolor metal specks burnt copper started to go on. ![]() And I test fit some parts. ![]() HOOOOLD it! I can still see the grain through my 17 coats of sealer, 3 coats of primer, and 10 coats of color... And man was it pretty grain... Time to sand it back down and give it a finish it deserves! ... ... ... I sponged on some olive green stain. After it dried I sanded the raised grain until it was basically white again, but the dark wood was still green. Then I watered down some of the same stain and sponged it onto the wood again. After it dried I sanded the raised grain again, and applied even more watered down stain. I don't know if my techniques were right or wrong, but I'm very happy with the result. ![]() ![]() After all the stain was dry I brushed on a "Golden Oak" tinted water-based grain filler. When it was dry, I sanded off the brush marks, and started layering up a matte clear coat. I wanted to shoot for an ulgy-is-beautiful kind of color. The guitar looked like it was made from boogers wiped on a saguaro cactus. I made the pickguard from a $0.99 sheet of acrylic plexiglass, painted white from behind. I used a Fender Highway 1 bridge, and some pretty cheap pickups that I found with very high output for single coils. the neck is a left handed mighty mite. This guitar cost me $200 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() PS: The neck pickup was duct taped into place for these photos. I was waiting for the mounting screws to be shipped... I still have plans for it in the future: I want to throw on a Bigsby, and put a humbucker in the bridge position... And I need to get up the guts to slap this decal on it (but I'm kind of a sloppy idiot and am worried I'll screw it up) ![]() Thanks, I hope you like it! -Andrew myspace.com/garagetone |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Knoxville, TN
Age: 28
Posts: 153
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Reading that whole thread, I thought you were gonna string it upside down too. Albert King, Otis Rush, Dick Dale, Doyle Bramhall II... I have thought about doing one that way, so I can get those ridiculous pull-down bends those guys get.
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#4 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
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Ha. Reminds me of this lefty mandolin player I met once who had a perfect, fully reversed copy of a Gibson F-5, complete with headstock inlay that looked like this:
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Pops... If you dance with the devil, the devil don't change. The devil changes you. Do not do to others what you do not want done to yourself. - Confucius |
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