Dazkeirle
Junior Member
- Messages
- 192
Dr Excess said:
The front for the most part is done, the back has a few (hundred) to do, a bit harder picking out the hog.
This front is without any sanding or treatment.
Plan will be to give it a sand down once it's mostly out, see what I'm dealing with. May use some warm damp rags to try and plump up the pores a little and reduce some of the damage and then sand flat then start with my actual sanding finishing routine.
If anybody else feels like doing this, picking filler out of the pours of their guitar I say go for it, it's easy..... not. It's a nightmare and the more you look the more you see.
There are still very tiny dots that I'm gonna let pass, the damage of removing them isn't worth it (I don't have tools more smaller than a pin head).
I'm hoping that a tru-oil swarf by working tru-oil with 400 grit sand paper will help me fill some of the grain and pores creates doing this (but at least they're not bright white anymore eh)
Hendrix said:that veneer would become great PRS PS style cover :guitarplayer2:
ByteFrenzy said:CynicalMe would remark that you've gone from having little white specks to having little black specks. But RestOfMe looks forward to seeing it with that TruOil on it - it's going to look great.
stratamania said:Koa blimey guvnor would you Adam and Eve it, what an Uncle Bob...
Maybe this will help. Maybe not. :icon_biggrin:Logrinn said:Now, where’s my cockney slang dictionary?
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Rgand said:Maybe this will help. Maybe not. :icon_biggrin:Logrinn said:Now, where’s my cockney slang dictionary?
:icon_scratch:
‘Blimey’ is used as a way of expressing surprise at something, often used when seeing or looking at something surprising or impressive instead of shocking or upsetting.
Guvnor: Boss, person in charge, person being spoken to
Adam and Eve – Cockney rhyming slang for believe. “Can you Adam and Eve it!”
Bob’s your uncle – The saying originally meant you could get anything or do anything if you had the right connections because it came about after the 20th British Prime Minister, Lord Salisbury, famously appointed a nephew into an important political post for which he didn’t have the relevant experience. Today it is more commonly used to say everything is OK. To "Uncle Bob it" may refer to being able to accomplish a daunting task.
Rgand said:Bob’s your uncle – The saying originally meant you could get anything or do anything if you had the right connections because it came about after the 20th British Prime Minister, Lord Salisbury, famously appointed a nephew into an important political post for which he didn’t have the relevant experience. Today it is more commonly used to say everything is OK. To "Uncle Bob it" may refer to being able to accomplish a daunting task.