RU36 said:I liked the way black knobs contrasted but I also thought the flame maple knobs dyed to match looked killer.
So here is what I came up with.
I dyed the whole knob with the same dye as the body, clear coated it, taped it off and sprayed black lacquer on the top and this is what I got.
I think I am going to add a white dot on the black part as and position marker, then clear it up and buff it for an exact match with the tops finish.
Max said:It looks like a completely different piece of maple, not as high quality. They all absorb dye differently.RU36 said:dying the headstock was a bit tricky, it did not except the dye the same way the body did for some reason even with the exact same ratios.\
Yep, the neck is hard maple, top is soft maple.Patrick said:Max said:It looks like a completely different piece of maple, not as high quality. They all absorb dye differently.RU36 said:dying the headstock was a bit tricky, it did not except the dye the same way the body did for some reason even with the exact same ratios.\
warmoth says that the figured maple tops are a different species thanthe figured maple necks
this guitar is filling my head with all sorts of ideas
When it comes to the fret board and neck yes, it's different, but the head stock veneer should be the same type as the body laminate. But since they are not cut from the same piece of maple, there could be enough difference to cause a color difference when dying them.Patrick said:Max said:It looks like a completely different piece of maple, not as high quality. They all absorb dye differently.RU36 said:dying the headstock was a bit tricky, it did not except the dye the same way the body did for some reason even with the exact same ratios.\
warmoth says that the figured maple tops are a different species thanthe figured maple necks
It should be, Warmoth doesn't offer solid quilt maple necks. They do offer flame maple though.Patrick said:is it veneer though?
:icon_thumright:Patrick said:ah, thanks for clarifying that