KOABUILD
Junior Member
- Messages
- 78
Final shaping and prepping for the finish; applying the Black Chalk and then sanding it into the grain and pores of the Roasted Maple.
I feel like the sanding was a huge success, the way it revealed the under lying grain pattern on the back of the neck after most of the Roasted Burns were sanded out can only be a good sign, now instead of struggling with an uncomfortably thick and slow caveman neck its smooth as silk and round in all the right places. :toothy12:
You can see the Roasting on the Neck originally burnt the wood and discolored its character when I stained previously...Gonna have to sand off the headstock now, looks like a complete refinish, well that will make it easier in many ways anyhow.
But Now She's built for speed.
I didnt photograph the rest of the process, but it gets very messy, I grind, rub and sand the Black Chalk down into the wood, then sand it back several times and then I will stain the whole neck, in the same order of multiple botched Oil Stain finish jobs as previously, and ultimately finish the neck into a Glowing Ember of the Great Wizard Gandolfs Life Staff and.....ahh...sorry, tooo many video games... :laughing7:
Now Im bored so Im going to Jam on it for a few Days.......until I feel like doing the next step...... beautiful thing is, the longer I use, abuse and cruze on this guitar, the better it seems to play, feel and look.
I feel like the sanding was a huge success, the way it revealed the under lying grain pattern on the back of the neck after most of the Roasted Burns were sanded out can only be a good sign, now instead of struggling with an uncomfortably thick and slow caveman neck its smooth as silk and round in all the right places. :toothy12:
You can see the Roasting on the Neck originally burnt the wood and discolored its character when I stained previously...Gonna have to sand off the headstock now, looks like a complete refinish, well that will make it easier in many ways anyhow.
But Now She's built for speed.
I didnt photograph the rest of the process, but it gets very messy, I grind, rub and sand the Black Chalk down into the wood, then sand it back several times and then I will stain the whole neck, in the same order of multiple botched Oil Stain finish jobs as previously, and ultimately finish the neck into a Glowing Ember of the Great Wizard Gandolfs Life Staff and.....ahh...sorry, tooo many video games... :laughing7:
Now Im bored so Im going to Jam on it for a few Days.......until I feel like doing the next step...... beautiful thing is, the longer I use, abuse and cruze on this guitar, the better it seems to play, feel and look.