There's a pretty cool book out, Children of the Neon Bamboo. One of the main artifacts of the story is a main characters' custom San Dimas.
"But, the highlight, the crème de la crème, of his arsenal was his custom, slime green, San Dimas-type guitar, with a Floyd Rose tremolo system bridge, maple neck, and two Seymour Duncan pickups. It was custom built by Charvel when they were just a boutique, custom builder before being bought out by Fender/CBS.
The art on it? Think Trapper Keeper. On the right side, looking at it, toward the neck were 3/4th inch pink squares connected like a semi-translucent glass floor with thin shaded lines of demarcation, breakpoints between tiles. After about 6 inches, the squares started to separate and fall off. The farther you got to the left, the farther the squares fell. The first few just slightly smaller, recently broken off, by the time the squares got halfway across the guitar, they graduated down to microscopic, looking like they had fallen thousands of feet into a green abyss."
And it comes back into play later in the story, one of the coolest parts actually.
As an avid reader and Charvel player, I really appreciated it.
Here's the book on amazon if you want to check it out, highly recommended:
Children of the Neon Bamboo: B. Glynn Kimmey: 9798988054115: Amazon.com: Movies & TV
"But, the highlight, the crème de la crème, of his arsenal was his custom, slime green, San Dimas-type guitar, with a Floyd Rose tremolo system bridge, maple neck, and two Seymour Duncan pickups. It was custom built by Charvel when they were just a boutique, custom builder before being bought out by Fender/CBS.
The art on it? Think Trapper Keeper. On the right side, looking at it, toward the neck were 3/4th inch pink squares connected like a semi-translucent glass floor with thin shaded lines of demarcation, breakpoints between tiles. After about 6 inches, the squares started to separate and fall off. The farther you got to the left, the farther the squares fell. The first few just slightly smaller, recently broken off, by the time the squares got halfway across the guitar, they graduated down to microscopic, looking like they had fallen thousands of feet into a green abyss."
And it comes back into play later in the story, one of the coolest parts actually.
As an avid reader and Charvel player, I really appreciated it.
Here's the book on amazon if you want to check it out, highly recommended:
Children of the Neon Bamboo: B. Glynn Kimmey: 9798988054115: Amazon.com: Movies & TV
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