I am wondering what you think of pickguarded strats that have either a flamed or quilted top. Are these common, or is it a waste of a beautiful top?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
pickgaurded strats,flame/quilted tops waste of wood?
Collapse
X
-
+3. They're a tone killer, too. There's nothing like routing pools in the body and mounting your pickups to a huge piece of plastic for sound improvement!
I have some painted gits w/pickguards and don't mind them, they're mostly mutts anyway, but anytime I have a choice, no guard. It's not like the protection they provide really helps them look that much better cosmetically anyway.Last edited by circle of the tyrants; 05-12-2006, 10:37 AM.
Comment
-
Beauty is in the eye (and the pocketbook) of the beholder. I've seen examples of guitars with nice maple tops and pickguards. Look at how many custom axes (Grosh, Suhr, etc.) have great tops and pickguards and still look great.
I have two guitars that have maple tops and solid finishes and I've always wondered what the figuring was like on them, so what do I know?Takeoffs are optional but landings are mandatory.
Comment
-
It would be nice to see the whole top without a PG, but!!
It is like a nice looking girl in a bikini. The bikini covers some of the surface, you want to see the rest, you know the rest is good, but the bikini keeps the interest and the expectation.Mr. Patience.... ask for a free consultation.
Comment
-
For the most part, I think it's blasphemy. Not that I think it looks bad, per se. But if you're going to have a nice figured top, why cover most of it up? Looks so much better rear-loaded/no PG.
That said, I also really like the looks of a nicely figured swamp ash body & transparent finish with a typical strat/pickguard layout. That's damn classy in its own traditional right.
Comment
Comment