LK carving information
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
LK carving information
You guys know everything so, I figure I'll throw it out there -
I'm thinking of getting an inexpensive bass and having some carving done. Since the guys who did the LK work were so phenomenal I was wondering, if anyone knew who they are and if any do private work. Wouldn't think they'd be Rickenbacker employees because what else would they be doing?
But, what do I know...
I'm thinking of getting an inexpensive bass and having some carving done. Since the guys who did the LK work were so phenomenal I was wondering, if anyone knew who they are and if any do private work. Wouldn't think they'd be Rickenbacker employees because what else would they be doing?
But, what do I know...
" It's not where you are, it's who you're with.".
The guy who did / does do the carving on the LK's is a Rickenbacker employee, he was the one who used to work on building Ric acoustics.
We got to meet him on the first SoCal confluence Factory
At that time he;d been working on the carvings for I think it was 18 months continually,
We got to meet him on the first SoCal confluence Factory
At that time he;d been working on the carvings for I think it was 18 months continually,
"It's Red Jim, but not as we know it...."
- incubus2432
- Senior Member
- Posts: 4174
- Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2004 11:26 am
I was looking into getting my ex-Ci carved in an LK-ish style but with skulls, bones, evil and death as a theme.
After some searching on the 'net I found a lady in Colorado that was willing to do the job for $500-ish. Her work looked great and I was willing to commit but she had a decent backlog and wouldn't take a deposit until I would be at a certain place on her waiting list. During the extensive wait my financial priorities shifted. Unfortunately my hard drive crashed and I lost all the info I had on her and have been unable to locate when I searched again recently. There were a few other folks that I contacted but up close carving samples looked "rough" or prices were crazy. It wasn't as easy to find someone as I originally thought it would be (I'm sure I don't have to tell RIC that).
After some searching on the 'net I found a lady in Colorado that was willing to do the job for $500-ish. Her work looked great and I was willing to commit but she had a decent backlog and wouldn't take a deposit until I would be at a certain place on her waiting list. During the extensive wait my financial priorities shifted. Unfortunately my hard drive crashed and I lost all the info I had on her and have been unable to locate when I searched again recently. There were a few other folks that I contacted but up close carving samples looked "rough" or prices were crazy. It wasn't as easy to find someone as I originally thought it would be (I'm sure I don't have to tell RIC that).

This is the only place I found on line -
http://www.violinguitarmaker.com/
I e-mailed them but, they never got back to me.
http://www.violinguitarmaker.com/
I e-mailed them but, they never got back to me.
" It's not where you are, it's who you're with.".
- incubus2432
- Senior Member
- Posts: 4174
- Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2004 11:26 am
Marc....look for wood carvers and don't worry about the guitar aspect. That will open up your search somewhat.
Jeff......Mac or not apparently my PowerBook doesn't like to be dropped on it's corner onto a hardwood floor while actively downloading Battlestar Galactica episodes.
My understanding was that there were three carvers. The original who only did a few. A brief mid-term gentleman and the closer pictured above. I could be wrong though.
Jeff......Mac or not apparently my PowerBook doesn't like to be dropped on it's corner onto a hardwood floor while actively downloading Battlestar Galactica episodes.
My understanding was that there were three carvers. The original who only did a few. A brief mid-term gentleman and the closer pictured above. I could be wrong though.
Brian - I think you're right about there being three carvers in total. I think one of the most interesting things about the carving is that while there was a design template (seen on display at the factory tour last year)...
... the work of the last carver deviated from this template. Here's my 4004LK - you can see it's quite different from the original design.

... the work of the last carver deviated from this template. Here's my 4004LK - you can see it's quite different from the original design.

A lot of the rather featureless woods used on non-fancy guitar bodies carve pretty well because they tend to be more uniform than something with a lot of cool grain. I keep toying with the idea of buying an old 4001 or 4003 and carving something based on this into the top. The original "Cresting Wave".



