They all look to be in Like New condition. Not a scratch. Were they ever played or have they been restored?
Jammin' south of the river
'20 Gibson A-2
Stromberg-Voisinet Tenor Guitar
Penny Whistle
My albums: http://www.mandolincafe.com/forum/album.php?u=7616
I have no idea. My girlfriend went over there to go shopping while I waited in line, came back and told me I had to go check it out, which I did, but they were closing and waiting for me to leave so thats all I was able to get was a few pictures, couldn't even get the serials.
Gunga......Gunga.....Gu-Lunga
Huh. The "Two Old Hippies" have found a pretty rare thing. A K5 from 1919.
The others are nice, though.
That harp guitar tailpiece looks like it belongs in a torture chamber.
But Amsterdam was always good for grieving
And London never fails to leave me blue
And Paris never was my kinda town
So I walked around with the Ft. Worth Blues
Great to see a variety of instruments on display. I wonder where the information that Lloyd Loar was a master luthier from though.
Hereby & forthwith, any instrument with an odd number of strings shall be considered broken. With regard to mix levels, usually the best approach is treating the mandolin the same as a cowbell.
Nice looking little collection they had there.
Visit www.fox-guitars.com - cool Gibson & Epiphone history and more. Vintage replacement mandolin pickguards
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