Besides, the band does so many shameful 80s covers that it somehow fits to have an instrument of the proper vintage to crank them out.

Moderator: jingle_jangle
I loved the way the aged white on your "old girl" turned out, Bob. It was so cool to do a stock color for a change, too!brewingfrog wrote:But Paul, I like the white look on my old girl!
Besides, the band does so many shameful 80s covers that it somehow fits to have an instrument of the proper vintage to crank them out.
Unfortunately some people don't believe in this practice...jingle_jangle wrote:...... Because the finish is pearlescent and reflective, the smallest defect in the wood or scratch will show through the color and CV. This surface must be perfect....
Dean, there are two possibilities here, concerning a factory JG finish. First (majority of cases), the wood underneath could have a simple defect or unexciting straight grain. Second, the instrument could have been finished in JG to simple complete or meet an order.dean712 wrote:Paul, sorry if you've answered this before, but I have to ask...
In your experience, do most Rickenbackers that were finished in solid colors at the factory have as nice a wood grain pattern as the one you're working on in this thread? My first reaction to the first photos in the thread was that it could have been a nice Mapleglo, too.
Just wondering... (I learn so much from this Forum). I have two Jetglo 4003's, and I've always wondered about the wood grain that might lie underneath...
Good one Paul!bassduke49 wrote:Well, we've done this before, but if you insist: