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My pleasure! I’m lucky to work in a field that I am passionate about, so anytime I can share the passion and possibly start someone on their own journey, I jump at it.
Voicing the top/back is largely about tapping the braces plates at key nodal locations and listening for pitches and relationships. From there braces are shaved back to allow for more flexibility where necessary.
I’ll admit that this is were the majority of the magic happens to separate an amazing guitar from a good guitar. Unfortunately, it’s almost entirely subjective and every piece of wood is different, so writing up a guide would prove challenging.
It you’d like to know more, Dana Bourgeois has some good videos on YouTube sort of highlighting his process.
Thank you very much! It’s still in need of some voicing and shaping, but should be ready to glue in an hour or two. I’ll snap some more detailed pics of the braces before I box it up.
Sounds like an incredible build. I love when folks use wood with a story to it.
There’s some decent inexpensive kit guitars out there that don’t require more than an IKEA-level handyman, and some basic tools you’ve probably already got lying around the house.
Take a look around and you’ll be surprised what you’ll find. Stewmac has a simple cigar box kit going for ~$100 right now. Not a shill, they just have quality stuff. You can definitely find stuff much cheaper on eBay and the like, but Stewmac has great customer service and guarantees all of their products. Plus they have a surplus of reference videos and articles on their site that can guide you through the toughest dovetail.
Awesome! What kind of body wood are you using? Also, what sort of bracing pattern do you plan to follow?
Hope you can find the time to make some dust soon, and make sure to document your progress to share with the rest of the class!
I highly recommend working through the process at least once. There’s a lot guitar building can teach you about woodworking in general, but my favorite part is learning about the crazy custom tools, jigs and fixtures that different luthiers use to achieve essentially the same goal.
Prettywhooped@lemmy.worldOPto Woodworking@lemmy.ca•Box follow up. Here’s some backs. Rims soon2·10 months agoSteel string flat tops. Standard X-bracing for the most part.
Prettywhooped@lemmy.worldOPto Woodworking@lemmy.ca•Box follow up. Here’s some backs. Rims soon2·10 months agoJust wait til I show off my buttwedge
Gladly! It’s been a long time since I’ve had any work to share, so it’ll be great to have a community to share it with again!
This was exactly what I was hoping it was