An F style has a repaired back seam.I beieve the seam was sanded then relacquered. There appears to be a "smudged" area
where the grain is obliterated. An easy fix to restore the grain? It would be purely for
cosmesis.
An F style has a repaired back seam.I beieve the seam was sanded then relacquered. There appears to be a "smudged" area
where the grain is obliterated. An easy fix to restore the grain? It would be purely for
cosmesis.
j pickens
pix of area-having trouble getting one onto the board-any hints?
j pickens
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"... beauty is not found in the excessive but what is lean and spare and subtle" - Terry Tempest Williams
here is the problem
j pickens
The area of concern is about 6 x 2 inches-I would think that the grain would exist throughout the width of the back-shouldn't more sanding bring it out?
j pickens
Nope, it'll just make the back thinner and make you have to do a full refinish. Whatta mess that would be. What you see is what the wood actually looks like, in all its semi-bookmatched glory. It's not an artifact of any previous repair.
From the limited view it looks to me like one half might have been put on upside down - i.e. one half has the tight flaming at the centre seam the other one has it at the edge.
Pete
(www.petewoodmanguitars.com)
It could be that mismatched, or it could just be the nature of the flitch it came from. Figure like this:
. . .exists when you can bookmatch flat and well-selected pieces. In other words, if this was the face of a block an inch thick, and you proceeded to carve a back out of it, you might very well find that what was perfectly bookmatched up on the flat plane lost that level of matching detail as you subtracted wood to get to the carved/curved final surface. Like this:
I'd still like to see a shot of the whole back.
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