@@christianisgnar At least you received it. I ordered a strat on Reverb from Alabama and it never arrived. Somebody at UPS had a very Happy Christmas. Hope they get electrocuted.
Fancy FA I look at all the guitars I had back in high school and think.... some people pay money to have this done... but money can't buy a memory like your friends crazy girlfriend throwing a salt shaker at you and hitting your guitar taking a chip out of the paint...
I’m just realizing I “relicked” my truck the other day. I’ve been worrying about how it devalued it, it here I’ve learned it has improved it’s character. It’s value has gone through the roof!
I dont understand why some people hate the idea of a reliced guitar. I love the way it looks. While this was done to the guitar on purpose, it still gets the point across that a instrument gets worn and loved and gigged a lot. It shows that this guitar is your go to guitar and that you dont treat it like a person, you treat like a piece of wood or a tool.
there is no better way to relic a guitar than playing it for years and years, every scratch should have its story. very cool video Dave, reliced guitars look beautiful
Zarko 320310 pa da ne uvredim coveka, to je njegova gitara neka radi sa njom sta hoce, ja to ne bih uradio sa svojim gitarama, ali covek ocigledno ima para pa mu se moze
It does tell the story - in just over 19 min! I must say aged look does appeal to me. I never had a second hand guitar, they were always brand spanking new - Les Paul, a Strat and JEM (Kramer and Charvel in the days of old). But having recently been to a number of shops here in the UK I realised how new guitars look too new to me lol - a bit sterile. Relic'd ones look almost homely and more comfy. I think I will try my hand at this with a Squire Classic Vibe Strat or Tele 50's which can be picked up for around 300 GBP new and by all accounts are a great little instruments. I love the 'paint over paint' effect and a cigarette burn marks on a headstock. Thanks for the vid Dave. Pozdrav Coveku i Zarku ;)
I actually find this look far more appealing than the plain paint job on a strat. I have no desire to have a guitar that looks more played than it is, I just genuinly think it makes the paint job more interesting. I love that people are getting so butt hurt over someone making cosmetic changes to their instrument... but don't give a S#!T if some rockstar completely destroys a guitar for fun.
This is incredible stupid. A rockstar smashing his guitar does it to entertain the audience. This is just a method for kids and dumb peolpe that dont respect the instrument to make the guitar cooler. A worn out guitar looks cooler, but the coolest thing is the journey to the worn out look. Myself and probably 95% of the guitar lovers have no respect for peolpe using this method.
My mates son knocked my Tele over so my mate started to go bananas at him. They couldn’t understand that I genuinely didn’t give a shit. Yep nothing looks and sounds better than a battered Fender.
The neck looks right but I know it wouldn't fool anyone up close who owns a genuine vintage. The lacquer/varnish doesn't literally scrape off, it wears down. It's actually totally smooth. The way to get it looking genuine is to scrape it and then use a light sandpaper so you wear all the varnish down around the area you have scraped. Then use either T cut or I prefer Brasso as it is an abrasive but it also gets black from where you rub the frets. The black settles into the area where there is no lacquer on the fretboard. The wear looks so genuine and the neck feels really smooth to play. The pick guard doesn't really go that dark but what does go the darkest is the plastic used for the pick ups and controls. I like to age metals. For screws I sand the heads and used to lay them in a puddle of saltwater. I say puddle because If you leave them half covered they corrode quicker. Be sure to wash these screws before using them or you will find they continue rusting. There are quicker ways to get metal to spot and age using household materials products. There are loads of videos on TH-cam of people who age metal to make art. They create patterns in rust and things. The best way is ideally to have a genuine vintage guitar but with digital images you can really study them in detail. Neck wear is definately very smooth. scraping like that won't do it and pencil comes off on your hands and when you wipe your guitar down it wipes off. I work as a tech and have to make repairs and I don't relic guitars so much as I sympathetically restore them. I can't put new parts on a well worn vintage guitar. I think a proper relic should feel like an old guitar.
so many hate comments. do your own thing people. not everyone plays their guitar 8 hours a day, gigs in bars on the weekend and want to wait 10-20 years to achieve a certain look. I like the relic look, they look like an instrument ready to be played in any setting and they dont have to be babied. Keep playing your poly coated USA standard that looks like every other strat in the bar or church on Sunday. Nice vid Dave
I don't get the hate for relicing guitars.. Some vintage finishes like Daphne blue and surf Green look awesome with some well done wear. I guess "purists" will say since it's done artificially it isn't "true" but whatever. I think those same people probably need a reminder that guitar playing is for fun.
@@rogerbaker5112 Nahhh you just obsess and get a stick up your you know what over silly things. Relax lol. No need to make people feel bad about what they do with their property. How would you like it if I talked trash about your guitars? Exactly...
Well said. As a owner of 30 guitars. If you play em from time to time, you will mess em up slightly or a lot. It's just going to happen. Dings... Scratches... Scuffs... Chips... It happens. Don't get mad. Spossed to be this way : )
I used a Dremel on it's lowest speed with a polishing wheel and green buffing compound to do the whole process of doing the neck in one step. Have to experiment with the shapes, but there's less chance of damaging the wood. The pick guard I soaked in really strong brewed coffee which worked, but turned out darker than what you got with the wood dye. If I had to do it over again I'd go with the wood dye. Great video!
Looks cool.One thing I've noticed with the wear on my '77 though is that it is actually really smooth I.E no difference in the level between the height of the paint and the bear wood(hard to explain).Maybe a little clear coat or something could work to smooth it out if you were bothered.Looks legit though from a distance.Good job!
Thank you very much. I know what you mean about guitars with wear like yours. Where its smooth to the body but i have seen some with really raised and jagged finish to. Very odd this relic malarkey. Thank you very much. :)
those pickup covers and knobs need some love too mate! also an awesome trick I learned for the metal parts. bridge, tuners, input jack hardware etc. is muriatic acid.1. just buff all hardware with sandpaper.2 in a good sizes flat bottom Tupperware. pour 1/2 inch of the acid in. 3 place pieces (not touching) into a smaller Tupperware and float on top (no cover) of the 1/2 inch of acid cover the large Tupperware with a lid and leave overnight. the vapor will age the shit out of the metal and it looks amazing! hit it with some vinegar after or it will keep aging! make sure you use this indirect process because if the acid actually touches the metal its way too much! thanks for the vid!
I want to do this so bad. Just for the aesthetics. But I just got my first "expensive" guitar and I'm scared I will fuck it up. I also heard a lot of people think it's odd but man it looks so damn cool. I wish I had a guitar with a nitro finish that I could just play until it looks like this.
Its crazy how with nitro finished guitars. You can literally scratch it and its being reliced that way. I have my strat since 2013 and Its been everywhere. Dropped many times, and it looks brand new. Not a fan of the thick shinny coating
My favorite stuff to use is nail polish remover, magic eraser and flitz polish. Works great and doesn’t leave the hard lines like chipping and scraping. Closest I’ve gotten to a nitro looking relic. You have to experiment with it till you find what methods works best.
There is that way as well but most new guitars are a Polyurethane finish and don't wear nicely and will never look as cool as the old ones. They chip more instead of wearing.
I have been playing and accumulating guitars since the late 70s. At last count over 75. None look like that which I bought new or in good shape and I toured in a rock band and survived the 80s. As your "tool", you take better care of it than your body. Some one messes with it you kick their ass. These look like it was tied to a bumper and dragged around. Totally unrealistic unless abused,owned by a child or a drunk with no sense of balance. That said I do like em.
Nothing wrong with relicing a guitar it's just a finish. The guitar was not blue in the first place....it was wood colour. And then somebody faked it with paint.
I bought an MIM Tele sunburst for $180 with an amp. They brought it down because it has some chips on the paint and some scratches. Its a 2013!!! Little did he know, this is exactly what I wanted to do when I first saw the posting of it!!
Just came across this as I'm looking to relic my late brothers guitar. He always wanted to relic his guitar but never got round to it. I won't ever play it and it's way to centumental to leave hidden away in a cupboard so im going to give it a go. NOTE: I'm awful at this kind of stuff. lol. I thought it was going to be difficult but this video has just made it so much more simple. I was able to easily understand the process and now going to give it a go. Thankyou for sharing! :)
Thank you so very much for watching and so happy you found the video useful. I'm very sorry for the loss of your brother and i hope you get his guitar relic'd. :)
Greetings from Oz, great video for the older player who cant wait for 10+ years to accumulate natural wear and tear. Your also a very good teacher and excellent player. Keep up the good work.
Like some other commentators, I think you should sand the edges of the knife marks on big arm wear areas. Arms don't wear sharp edges, they leave a smooth blended edge generally.
Thanks for the advice and i'm going to give it a go. I have seen a few old guitars with very Sharpe jagged arm wear though. Its a funny thing is age. Thank you again. :)
I rub pickguards down with a wet scotchbrite pad which takes the shine off. Some react well to being left to soak in coffee for a few days but others will come out clean regardless.
As a high school student I bought a box of guitar parts from a teacher for $40. A mix of Fender and Charvel parts from the 70s/80s. One notable item was the strat neck with a double inlay skunk stripe on the back and a complete set of chrome Gotoh Crown Head tuners. I didn't even play guitar at the time, but for a summer project I used my cousin's strat as a guide to assemble it. I went off to college and left it in an attic in the Midwest (Summer and Winter) for many years and didn't find it until last year. It is somewhat "reliced" in the sense that the clear coat over the body is now lightly cracked (from temp changes). I was concerned that there might be damage to the neck, but I was still able to get the action down to 2.5-3 mm depending on the string.
I saw a video of a your of the Fender factory and it was back when this relic stuff first started and the guy in the Custom Shop had a big key ring on a chain 28th a bunch of keys, like you might see with an apartment maintenance worker or something, and he would literally just lightly take a swing and slam the keys into the guitar's body to put random dings and scratches in the paint... I could absolutely never do/own a relic job, but to each his own.
I don't think the custom shop are doing good relic work any more. When they first started doing them they were outsourced to a guy called Vince Cunnetto. He set a small company up and a small team did the work and then shipped the parts back for assembly. They looked good. Fender decided to do it in-house so he wound the company up. For whatever reason he chose not to continue as a service in his own name. What I dislike about the custom shop is that because each guy uses the same bunch of keys you see the same patterns of dings over the guitar.... It looks like someone has thrown a bunch of keys at it. It's not random because of that. I've kind of gone off the look of them. Each to his own though. Playing at the end sounded great btw OP.
Jaime Moreno yeah the guitars not even. it has paint on the body and Lacquer on the neck taken off but it's not even. the area on the neck that's not reliced looks bright and new and you can tell it's not genuine.
Jaime Moreno yeah a good relic job is actually tough work hence why they can be expensive. the biggest problem with this one is that most old Strats are a nitro finish which is really thin and wears easily and yellows over time. Poly is a lot thicker and harder and a poly guitar would not wear like this at all naturally.
I'm too careful with my guitars so people like me this is what a careful player like me will have to do as playing for decades would not make that happen..It looks fantastic great job
Welle Mr. Dave... I own a Fender American Strat from 2004 that is Olympic white and it 'WAS' beautiful until YOU influence me to go to WORK. And today i did the same to it as you have done here and it's like having a totally new guitar! Soooo cooool and RELIC it became. :-D :-D But since it has rosewood neck i do not dear to tutch the neck..
He's a tip. Those Fender nickle plated parts, like the bridge, tuners, string tree, screws, will tarnish if you dampen a paper towel with white vinegar and leave it over night.
hi Dave ! I recently got into watching your videos. Just wanted to say that they are always fun and very informative. Your guitar looks beautiful. I have no idea why some people leave negative comments about it. It's your guitar, you can do what you want, right? I have an old squier strat that I'm working on. I'm not going to do as much as you did( mostly cause I don't want to screw it up lol) , but I am going to age the neck, headstock and pickgaurd
Greta video, i have a cheap partscaster and I will try some of your tips 👍 Also, I giving my guitar some natural relic by telling all my friends kids to go ahead and try it out when they are visiting 😂
Thanks Dave, another great video! I really love those relicted guitars, but I'm also wondering, if the whole thing isn't a bit too much. I remember, when I first saw a report on EC's Blackie (a heavy used and well aged guitar) on YT. It never showed up those heavy marks on the body. The neck itself looked dirty and roadworn. All I wanted to say is, I couldn't do my guitar any harm ;-)!
Ok so what I don't like is where there is exposed wood and then a very clear line of paint. When paint wears off naturally there is an area in between where there is very faint traces of paint left. Let's call that area the middle ground. Now to achieve this you need to do the following. 1. creating that middle ground requires you to use sand paper 2. Don't start doing what he is doing immediately. cause if you do then creating that middle ground means using sandpaper on the edge of the paint which also means sanding and removing some of the wood which you don't want. 3. So start by drawing two circles with a marker. One circle (circle A) being inside the other (circle B). Circle A represents the area you want to strip right off so the wood is showing. Circle B represents the middle ground. 4. You start aggressively sanding the border between circle A and Circle B until part of the wood start to show. 5. NOW you're ready to strip circle A like shown in this video. so then you'll have a clean circle A and around it you'll have a faded middle ground which is circle B and then a perfect paint outside of circle B so there is a nice transition.
Reallt Beautiful Relic job 👏 I thought the areas that have been relic’d were sealed with some kind of lacquer or oil so that the paint doesn’t keep chipping, but maybe i’m wrong.
This is a really great job and the time you've invested is evident in the finished product. I have a Black fender strat with a maple fretboard and I want to "relic" it. Your video has given me some valuable insight into how to go about it the right way. Thank you my Friend
I bought a MIM new in 98 . It's been my "beater" guitar that gets left out and dinged around as well as played more than the others and it's barely scratched and dinged . You would think 20+ years later it would look reliced but it doesn't . Nice jam at the end !
Polyurethane finishes are super tough, they simply do not wear the same. I had a 1965 Fender Mustang when I was a teen and the lacquer was super soft, you could literally sink your nails in it. Mine was a slab body and the lacquer was gone where my forearm touched the guitar, I’m sure the finish was already thin by the third me I bought it but it didn’t take me long to wear it all the way to the wood.
People who say they don’t like reliced guitars must be wearing the bluest stiffest jeans of all time. Cause most jeans are faded and made to look worn before you buy them. So does that make you fake also? Hmmm
Wow... that is really good relic job Dave, you should apply to Fender Custom Shop. They will snatch you up. I would suggest though that it is a good idea to go over the relicing with some 500 grain sandpaper to make it look and feel smoother.
Hi Dave, I think it looks too much but at the same time looks too clean.... You need to 'rust' the bridge saddles, screws and pick up magnets by rubbing over with sandpaper and using a cotton bud to paint on vinegar and then leave. This works. Also all the plastics need to be made to look a bit grubby. Soaking in tea / coffee is only part of this. Again, rub plastic parts (pick up covers, knobs ) with 800 grit paper, and then soak in tea and then rub dirt into scratches. Remember LESS IS MORE... Body looks OK but I would rub the whole body with 1000 -1500 -2000 grit paper to take the shine off.
I love the look of a worn out guitar and what’s so good about it is that once it’s worn there’s no way you can make it look bad because it would just add to the look
I think you did a great job and I will definitely be using some of your techniques, so thank you :) However I think Kluson look alikes and genuine fender saddles would do that last bit. Not to mention (and most likely harder to find) a neck that has the adjustment of the trus rod at the heel Another thing: Wouldn't the wear at the arm rest (and belly cut) not be more natural by being smoothend out between the paint and the wood?
Hey Nice job Dave, I often wondered what you were upto after the guitar shop job. Good to see you enjoying yrself. Just quick question.. Can you remember what the nut width ws on that Entwistle pink strat. I remember it being an awesome neck and now wish id measured it.. any info or ideas on it would be a BIG help. Thanks dave Rock n Roll Carl
@@thedavesimpson Oooh yes please dave, thatd be great. can i have the whole neck measurements and i'll get one made up buddy. whats the nut width. love your channel too
I envy you, that you can do that. I have relativly good Fender strats and I dare not to do that. I am unskilled and it would certainly end in a desaster. So I let time do the job and let dings come natural. The only thing I have done is darken the white plastic hardware (scratchplate, knobs etc.) I have done it an other way than you, because I only wanted a gentle darkening. I have a method with low risk. I simply but the things in coffee and let them there over night. But it creates only a slight effect. The good thing is, you an do this as often as you want and slightly get more effect. And because i am unskilled the chances are high, that I get some "relic" if I try to repair or setup the guitar.
Play Nirvana including endless namelessfor years and put it back together after smashing it. Then cover it with stickers and then sand the stickers an play it for Twenty years. O yeah.....and it's not even nitro. Now it's my favourite guitar and sounds and looks great. My friends thinking it's a custom 😂.
Of course, nothing beats the look of a proper beater thats been thrashed around for 25 years, but a relic look is so much nicer than a spec finish, especially Fender finishes.
Thank you very much indeed. I shall do a vid on how to remove the neck finish soonish. I didn't want to do anything to the back of this neck as it feels great the way it is. :)
Gavin O'D no I know that. I actually own a 62 vintage reissue hot rod strat that I absolutely love that's finished in nitro, it was one of the things I made sure of when I was buying a 62 reissue cause even those were poly unless you got the hot rod version or a custom shop. I was just making a point that almost 80 percent of fenders now are poly finish unless it's a special run or custom shop for the most part.
Ricky Weimann Yea I know, the nitro finish is just something I wish they would put on all their guitars. It's a pity they don't. Guess fender are just getting cheap.
Real nice job but you should have stained those tone pots to a similar colour to the pick guard, leaving them sit over night in black coffee stains them nicely also the pick up covers too
I know the thing about poly is that it doesn't age as nicely, but my poly Strat is about 10 years old. I've got another that's 29. They're aging quite nicely and naturally. Sure, it's taking them longer but it's very satisfying to see them age. I'm pretty hard on them
MrBigboy1057 I've played on one of my guitars for 20 years and one for 18, still looks quite new. Maybe I play in a way that does touch the guitar that much. I always heard from people that I play really hard and aggressive. Oh well. :)
Whatever makes you want to pick up the guitar more to play it goes for me. If that be relicing then go for it! If that be covering it in stickers and duct tape go for it! If that be burning down the lacquer go for it! Or if that be leaving it as is go for it! I mostly hate to see folks buying a real relic guitar and having it locked behind the glass as a decoration. Whats the effing story with that. Sure its "real" but its not playing anymore! Job well done Dave! Your playing awesome as per usual!
looks nice but i think it needs more smaller dings. I have a les paul jr I have played a ton and it is covered with small dings and scratches but there are only 2 places where the wood is actually showing.
you haters need to chill the fuck out. his guitar and he can do what he wants with it. Sorry that some of us don't have $15000+ for a vintage fender. I don't even have a fender! I have a really good knock off that I'm working on making look vintage at the moment. it's surf green and I'm really taking my time on it cause I want it to look beat to shit but believe able at the same time and I think this is a great video for any body looking to relic their guitar.
Thank you very very much indeed and you have hit the nail right on the head. If its not your guitar then what does it matter. Ian Paice. Deep Purple's drummer once trashed him drum kit on stage back in the 70s and he got flak for it in the music press and he got sick of it and said "I bought it so I can break it". Thank you again and i hope you guitar looks great once its done. :)
Accidentally I discovered the best way to age the paint me king it look like a real vintage guitar, put the body in your kitchen oven at medium temperature for an hour or two you'll see how it works, really looks like the passing of decades,then you can give specific treatment to some areas.. don't ask how I discovered that...
Jean Loop go on spill the beans how did you accidentally leave a guitar body in a kitchen oven?
6 ปีที่แล้ว +5
I have a 60s Japanese guitar and isn't that relic, whoever owned it took good care of it or just didn't play it like yeaaa has chips here and there but nothing major
Question: Does sanding off Nitro present a health risk? I understand the precautions to take to protect your skin and lungs while sanding. Yet, I will be pressing my arm against the guitar body that now has exposed nitro. Could rubbing against this now sanded nitro cause potential skin issues?
I just came up with a brilliant idea. Relic cars, straight from the factory. BRB gonna call toyota ask them to ding up the car a bit, add some keyed scratches.. boom!! $5k more.
No hate here... seems equivalent to buying pre ripped jeans. Or I guess intentionally ripping them. I like to earn my wear and tear. But this is cool. Definitely what I'm working on having my geetar look like in a few years.
More like faded jeans, IMO. Ripped jeans will continue to rip and won't last long. Relicing doesn't take any significant service life out of the guitar.
If ever ...once in quite a while ... i could do this ... probably to a friends guitar ... i hopefully will remember this great instruction video (;-)) I personally do customize my guitars too ... but its more or less changing the guts ... PUs, pots, treble bleeder, serial/parallel-switch, split coil via push-pull-pot ... Anyway ... great instructive video ... as always (;-)) Merzi villemals!
I also prefer relic strats, but I would like to get new and relic it with the time and playing. I have one for almost 10 years, playing really frequently and looks like new, I even dropped it once or twice from the chair and nothing.... the back of the neck looks a little bit sore, but that it..... let see if I get brave enough to do something like this
How to Relic a Guitar:
1. Buy a guitar
2. ship it through UPS
3, now you have a reliced guitar.
I ordered a guitar from Reverb last winter and UPS left the Box in a snowbank hahaha
@@christianisgnar congrats on your reliced guitar
It might be reliced but it’s also in 15 pieces
@@christianisgnar At least you received it. I ordered a strat on Reverb from Alabama and it never arrived. Somebody at UPS had a very Happy Christmas. Hope they get electrocuted.
@@gutbucket260 thats fucked! Im sorry that happened to you
how to relic a guitar .... let a Highschool student borrow it with no case for about a year
Haha. :)
Hey! I take care of my guitars! Only now I'd like to give my Strat a bit of character.
Fancy FA I look at all the guitars I had back in high school and think.... some people pay money to have this done... but money can't buy a memory like your friends crazy girlfriend throwing a salt shaker at you and hitting your guitar taking a chip out of the paint...
words take out of my mouth....lol
month*
Now show me how to relic my guitar skills, so I can sound like guitarist with 30years of experience.
Hha. I'm afraid I'm not good enough to show you that. Sorry. :)
get some confidence and you sure will sound like 30 years
Well, easy, you need some wood dye and a sharp knife
lol
Just a tip, you sound like Jimmy Savile
Damn, I dropped my guitar and chipped off some paint, I had no idea I was improving it.
Battlescars or medals I can't tell lol
yeah stick some fender custom shop decals on it and its worth a small fortune.
This deserves a heart!
I’m just realizing I “relicked” my truck the other day. I’ve been worrying about how it devalued it, it here I’ve learned it has improved it’s character. It’s value has gone through the roof!
same😁
I've never seen someone carefully destroy something
Its hardly destroyed. Its how i want it to look and it works fine and i love it. Thank you for watching. :)
gental robots ever been in a relationship?
ask my ex
It’s not a destruction, but it’s a creation ; ).
Go live by a public housing.
My Jag bass is in the corner of my room looking me like ( •_•) while i watch this video.
Just scraped my strat on concrete. Easy relic
Edit: i regret doing that
oh no :(
tf
@Shreks white cousin AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Battle scar fantastica... theres a sci fi joke in there somewhere.
I dont understand why some people hate the idea of a reliced guitar. I love the way it looks. While this was done to the guitar on purpose, it still gets the point across that a instrument gets worn and loved and gigged a lot. It shows that this guitar is your go to guitar and that you dont treat it like a person, you treat like a piece of wood or a tool.
A naturally worn guitar is awesome but one “hit by a truck” looks sick..
@@MichaelTheophilus906 its not phony as long as you tell people you did it yourself and its not vintage.
Because guitars that have been owned for a long time don't even look like that unless you fk it up on purpose or you're touring constantly.
You don't have to treat your guitar like a person but you don't have to fk around with it either. Just learn to respect your instrument?
Because it's not genuine.
there is no better way to relic a guitar than playing it for years and years, every scratch should have its story. very cool video Dave, reliced guitars look beautiful
kako moze ovo da ti svidja unakazi gitaru covek
Zarko 320310 pa da ne uvredim coveka, to je njegova gitara neka radi sa njom sta hoce, ja to ne bih uradio sa svojim gitarama, ali covek ocigledno ima para pa mu se moze
I know but my poly finish guitars will never age like this no matter how much i play them. Thank you for watching. :)
It does tell the story - in just over 19 min! I must say aged look does appeal to me. I never had a second hand guitar, they were always brand spanking new - Les Paul, a Strat and JEM (Kramer and Charvel in the days of old). But having recently been to a number of shops here in the UK I realised how new guitars look too new to me lol - a bit sterile. Relic'd ones look almost homely and more comfy. I think I will try my hand at this with a Squire Classic Vibe Strat or Tele 50's which can be picked up for around 300 GBP new and by all accounts are a great little instruments. I love the 'paint over paint' effect and a cigarette burn marks on a headstock. Thanks for the vid Dave. Pozdrav Coveku i Zarku ;)
Oh YEAH! Take it to a pre school and let the kids have at it for a week OR 2. LOL!
The neck looks like it was played 24/7/365 since the universe began.
😂
I agree the necks a little over done
Took me ten years to relic my guitar
12 to relic my main guitar. :)
@Clowers, Need some ice for that burn?
My bass is 15 years old, the paint job still like new, and I play like a lot. How to relic your guitar naturally?
Myc 32 you probably dont use it much/sweat much while playing or its finished in poly (very difficult to relic unless you abuse the shit out of it)
Took me 6 month of work to Buy one
I actually find this look far more appealing than the plain paint job on a strat. I have no desire to have a guitar that looks more played than it is, I just genuinly think it makes the paint job more interesting.
I love that people are getting so butt hurt over someone making cosmetic changes to their instrument... but don't give a S#!T if some rockstar completely destroys a guitar for fun.
Really I hate it when poser rock stars smash their guitars. Its an instrument. Big ego posers :/
Pete Townshend is a poser then?
This is incredible stupid. A rockstar smashing his guitar does it to entertain the audience. This is just a method for kids and dumb peolpe that dont respect the instrument to make the guitar cooler. A worn out guitar looks cooler, but the coolest thing is the journey to the worn out look. Myself and probably 95% of the guitar lovers have no respect for peolpe using this method.
Gjermund Sletten You talking to me?
No i was talking to KnightSquire
you forgot the cigarette burn on the headstock
He showed it
Who new it's straight up art..I mean u can screw up a relic..😁
4:47 "obligatory cigarette burn on the headstock"
Not everyone is SRV fan.
@@Phoenix_cataclysm_in_2040 or evh
My mates son knocked my Tele over so my mate started to go bananas at him. They couldn’t understand that I genuinely didn’t give a shit.
Yep nothing looks and sounds better than a battered Fender.
Q Tips Wallet read this with a Peckham accent
@@cosmblus 😂😂😂
Relic jobs are really difficult: took me 20 years of playing to get it done ;-)
:)
I am 19
Your guitar must be from the late 60's. I have a 35 year old strat that looks like the day I got it. That poly aint ever coming off.
The neck looks right but I know it wouldn't fool anyone up close who owns a genuine vintage. The lacquer/varnish doesn't literally scrape off, it wears down. It's actually totally smooth. The way to get it looking genuine is to scrape it and then use a light sandpaper so you wear all the varnish down around the area you have scraped. Then use either T cut or I prefer Brasso as it is an abrasive but it also gets black from where you rub the frets. The black settles into the area where there is no lacquer on the fretboard. The wear looks so genuine and the neck feels really smooth to play.
The pick guard doesn't really go that dark but what does go the darkest is the plastic used for the pick ups and controls. I like to age metals. For screws I sand the heads and used to lay them in a puddle of saltwater. I say puddle because If you leave them half covered they corrode quicker. Be sure to wash these screws before using them or you will find they continue rusting. There are quicker ways to get metal to spot and age using household materials products. There are loads of videos on TH-cam of people who age metal to make art. They create patterns in rust and things. The best way is ideally to have a genuine vintage guitar but with digital images you can really study them in detail. Neck wear is definately very smooth. scraping like that won't do it and pencil comes off on your hands and when you wipe your guitar down it wipes off. I work as a tech and have to make repairs and I don't relic guitars so much as I sympathetically restore them. I can't put new parts on a well worn vintage guitar. I think a proper relic should feel like an old guitar.
Paul Evans was
Paul Evans hit me up on Facebook, I also have a businesses restoring stringed instruments.
so many hate comments. do your own thing people. not everyone plays their guitar 8 hours a day, gigs in bars on the weekend and want to wait 10-20 years to achieve a certain look. I like the relic look, they look like an instrument ready to be played in any setting and they dont have to be babied. Keep playing your poly coated USA standard that looks like every other strat in the bar or church on Sunday. Nice vid Dave
Very well said. Thank you for watching. : )
I don't get the hate for relicing guitars.. Some vintage finishes like Daphne blue and surf Green look awesome with some well done wear. I guess "purists" will say since it's done artificially it isn't "true" but whatever. I think those same people probably need a reminder that guitar playing is for fun.
To right. :)
They're also the same people who buy pre-faded denim with holes in them completely unaware of the irony.
Plus isnt it just for fun, got an indonesian strat I got for $7 why not relic it? Just having fun!
Its pathetically inauthentic. That's why I think they're shit.
@@rogerbaker5112 Nahhh you just obsess and get a stick up your you know what over silly things. Relax lol. No need to make people feel bad about what they do with their property. How would you like it if I talked trash about your guitars? Exactly...
I put my wife and kids in the room where I keep my 4 guitars and now I have 4 “reliced” guitars.
I tied my prs to the back of my car....
This guitar looks awesome! And you wouldn’t really have to worry about keeping the guitar pristine at all times, cause it’s meant to look used!
Well said. As a owner of 30 guitars. If you play em from time to time, you will mess em up slightly or a lot. It's just going to happen. Dings... Scratches... Scuffs... Chips... It happens.
Don't get mad. Spossed to be this way : )
I used a Dremel on it's lowest speed with a polishing wheel and green buffing compound to do the whole process of doing the neck in one step. Have to experiment with the shapes, but there's less chance of damaging the wood. The pick guard I soaked in really strong brewed coffee which worked, but turned out darker than what you got with the wood dye. If I had to do it over again I'd go with the wood dye. Great video!
Looks cool.One thing I've noticed with the wear on my '77 though is that it is actually really smooth I.E no difference in the level between the height of the paint and the bear wood(hard to explain).Maybe a little clear coat or something could work to smooth it out if you were bothered.Looks legit though from a distance.Good job!
Thank you very much. I know what you mean about guitars with wear like yours. Where its smooth to the body but i have seen some with really raised and jagged finish to. Very odd this relic malarkey. Thank you very much. :)
those pickup covers and knobs need some love too mate! also an awesome trick I learned for the metal parts. bridge, tuners, input jack hardware etc. is muriatic acid.1. just buff all hardware with sandpaper.2 in a good sizes flat bottom Tupperware. pour 1/2 inch of the acid in. 3 place pieces (not touching) into a smaller Tupperware and float on top (no cover) of the 1/2 inch of acid
cover the large Tupperware with a lid and leave overnight. the vapor will age the shit out of the metal and it looks amazing! hit it with some vinegar after or it will keep aging! make sure you use this indirect process because if the acid actually touches the metal its way too much! thanks for the vid!
Thank you very much indeed. : )
I want to do this so bad. Just for the aesthetics.
But I just got my first "expensive" guitar and I'm scared I will fuck it up. I also heard a lot of people think it's odd but man it looks so damn cool.
I wish I had a guitar with a nitro finish that I could just play until it looks like this.
Its crazy how with nitro finished guitars. You can literally scratch it and its being reliced that way. I have my strat since 2013 and Its been everywhere. Dropped many times, and it looks brand new. Not a fan of the thick shinny coating
My favorite stuff to use is nail polish remover, magic eraser and flitz polish. Works great and doesn’t leave the hard lines like chipping and scraping. Closest I’ve gotten to a nitro looking relic. You have to experiment with it till you find what methods works best.
How to relic a guitar.... play it ALLOT
There is that way as well but most new guitars are a Polyurethane finish and don't wear nicely and will never look as cool as the old ones. They chip more instead of wearing.
Irish Teletubbies Play it a lot relics it? I'm just playing a guitar not using it as an axe to chop trees xD
Dave Simpson Would the american fender standard relic better than a Mexican one?
Dave Simpson Just get the 60 reissue Strats from fender, they have no wear and have a nitrocellulose finish, easy to wear down.
I have been playing and accumulating guitars since the late 70s. At last count over 75. None look like that which I bought new or in good shape and I toured in a rock band and survived the 80s. As your "tool", you take better care of it than your body. Some one messes with it you kick their ass. These look like it was tied to a bumper and dragged around. Totally unrealistic unless abused,owned by a child or a drunk with no sense of balance. That said I do like em.
OMG that's incredible, even the sound became vintage....
I think it look good! People buy a sunburst because they like it people relic because they like it. It's all about the love of the guitar. Cheers
Nothing wrong with relicing a guitar it's just a finish.
The guitar was not blue in the first place....it was wood colour.
And then somebody faked it with paint.
Andy Shellldon: that's deep🤘🏻
I bought an MIM Tele sunburst for $180 with an amp. They brought it down because it has some chips on the paint and some scratches. Its a 2013!!! Little did he know, this is exactly what I wanted to do when I first saw the posting of it!!
Only thing I won’t touch is the fretboard though. I’d like to hopefully do that naturally
Just came across this as I'm looking to relic my late brothers guitar. He always wanted to relic his guitar but never got round to it. I won't ever play it and it's way to centumental to leave hidden away in a cupboard so im going to give it a go. NOTE: I'm awful at this kind of stuff. lol. I thought it was going to be difficult but this video has just made it so much more simple. I was able to easily understand the process and now going to give it a go. Thankyou for sharing! :)
Thank you so very much for watching and so happy you found the video useful. I'm very sorry for the loss of your brother and i hope you get his guitar relic'd. :)
That's very kind of you. I have already sourced the dye for the scratch plate and ordering the craft knife :)
Greetings from Oz, great video for the older player who cant wait for 10+ years to accumulate natural wear and tear. Your also a very good teacher and excellent player. Keep up the good work.
Like some other commentators, I think you should sand the edges of the knife marks on big arm wear areas. Arms don't wear sharp edges, they leave a smooth blended edge generally.
Thanks for the advice and i'm going to give it a go. I have seen a few old guitars with very Sharpe jagged arm wear though. Its a funny thing is age. Thank you again. :)
That's true, I'm pretty old and the older I get the more sharp edges I have :D
Maybe cut little sand paper pads and stick them on an electric toothbrush for doing the edges
I rub pickguards down with a wet scotchbrite pad which takes the shine off. Some react well to being left to soak in coffee for a few days but others will come out clean regardless.
As a high school student I bought a box of guitar parts from a teacher for $40. A mix of Fender and Charvel parts from the 70s/80s. One notable item was the strat neck with a double inlay skunk stripe on the back and a complete set of chrome Gotoh Crown Head tuners. I didn't even play guitar at the time, but for a summer project I used my cousin's strat as a guide to assemble it. I went off to college and left it in an attic in the Midwest (Summer and Winter) for many years and didn't find it until last year. It is somewhat "reliced" in the sense that the clear coat over the body is now lightly cracked (from temp changes). I was concerned that there might be damage to the neck, but I was still able to get the action down to 2.5-3 mm depending on the string.
I saw a video of a your of the Fender factory and it was back when this relic stuff first started and the guy in the Custom Shop had a big key ring on a chain 28th a bunch of keys, like you might see with an apartment maintenance worker or something, and he would literally just lightly take a swing and slam the keys into the guitar's body to put random dings and scratches in the paint... I could absolutely never do/own a relic job, but to each his own.
ugh- excuse the typos, stupid autocorrect on my phone...
No. You just don't proof read. LOL!
MrJohnnyDistortion This is TH-cam we aren't writing an essay so proof reading is not needed...Just edit is after
I don't think the custom shop are doing good relic work any more. When they first started doing them they were outsourced to a guy called Vince Cunnetto. He set a small company up and a small team did the work and then shipped the parts back for assembly. They looked good. Fender decided to do it in-house so he wound the company up. For whatever reason he chose not to continue as a service in his own name. What I dislike about the custom shop is that because each guy uses the same bunch of keys you see the same patterns of dings over the guitar.... It looks like someone has thrown a bunch of keys at it. It's not random because of that. I've kind of gone off the look of them. Each to his own though. Playing at the end sounded great btw OP.
Why not use sandpaper high grain to make it look more realistic? Long term wear looks smoother IMO.
Not always. I’ve seen some very rough arm wear where they were wearing bracelets.
it doesnt look old just looks relicd
Jaime Moreno yeah the guitars not even. it has paint on the body and Lacquer on the neck taken off but it's not even. the area on the neck that's not reliced looks bright and new and you can tell it's not genuine.
Jaime Moreno yeah a good relic job is actually tough work hence why they can be expensive. the biggest problem with this one is that most old Strats are a nitro finish which is really thin and wears easily and yellows over time. Poly is a lot thicker and harder and a poly guitar would not wear like this at all naturally.
The name of the video is how to relic a guitar, not how to time travel and make it old...
I'm too careful with my guitars so people like me this is what a careful player like me will have to do as playing for decades would not make that happen..It looks fantastic great job
Thank you very much. : )
The art of destruction, not my cuppa tea but each to his own, good viddy all the same Dave. :)
Thank you very much . :)
The art of destruction is a very valid school of magi.... sorry wrong gam.. i mean life? i dont know anymore :C
It's not exactly my thing either, but I do want to make a Blackie at some point, so...
I've often wondered if relic-ed guitars lose or gain value if you dent them.
Surely a interesting project, I really enjoyed the video and looking forward to try it on my guitar
Welle Mr. Dave... I own a Fender American Strat from 2004 that is
Olympic white and it 'WAS' beautiful until YOU influence me to
go to WORK. And today i did the same to it as you have done here
and it's like having a totally new guitar! Soooo cooool and RELIC
it became. :-D :-D But since it has rosewood neck i do not dear
to tutch the neck..
He's a tip. Those Fender nickle plated parts, like the bridge, tuners, string tree, screws, will tarnish if you dampen a paper towel with white vinegar and leave it over night.
Thank you very much indeeed. I'll give it a whirl. :)
Your picture today made me watch it again dave. I want my fretboard like this. But i dont want to mess it up man
fretboard looks great..
Thank you very much. :)
Hello Dave, what a great result!
The best aged guitar on TH-cam!
Now I'm going to relic my Fender Strat.
Thank you very much. :)
hi Dave ! I recently got into watching your videos. Just wanted to say that they are always fun and very informative. Your guitar looks beautiful. I have no idea why some people leave negative comments about it. It's your guitar, you can do what you want, right? I have an old squier strat that I'm working on. I'm not going to do as much as you did( mostly cause I don't want to screw it up lol) , but I am going to age the neck, headstock and pickgaurd
Exactly. I bought it so i can do what i want with it. :) Thank you so much for watching. :)
Greta video, i have a cheap partscaster and I will try some of your tips 👍
Also, I giving my guitar some natural relic by telling all my friends kids to go ahead and try it out when they are visiting 😂
Thanks Dave, another great video! I really love those relicted guitars, but I'm also wondering, if the whole thing isn't a bit too much. I remember, when I first saw a report on EC's Blackie (a heavy used and well aged guitar) on YT. It never showed up those heavy marks on the body. The neck itself looked dirty and roadworn. All I wanted to say is, I couldn't do my guitar any harm ;-)!
It does hurt
Almost 650,000 views on this one now!!! Congrats Dave!!!
i would never do this, but i love how into it you are. great work, looks awesome
Thank you very much indeed. : )
Ok so what I don't like is where there is exposed wood and then a very clear line of paint. When paint wears off naturally there is an area in between where there is very faint traces of paint left. Let's call that area the middle ground. Now to achieve this you need to do the following.
1. creating that middle ground requires you to use sand paper
2. Don't start doing what he is doing immediately. cause if you do then creating that middle ground means using sandpaper on the edge of the paint which also means sanding and removing some of the wood which you don't want.
3. So start by drawing two circles with a marker. One circle (circle A) being inside the other (circle B). Circle A represents the area you want to strip right off so the wood is showing. Circle B represents the middle ground.
4. You start aggressively sanding the border between circle A and Circle B until part of the wood start to show.
5. NOW you're ready to strip circle A like shown in this video. so then you'll have a clean circle A and around it you'll have a faded middle ground which is circle B and then a perfect paint outside of circle B so there is a nice transition.
Love it....what about the shiny hardware....shouldn't you age it also
Reallt Beautiful Relic job 👏 I thought the areas that have been relic’d were sealed with some kind of lacquer or oil so that the paint doesn’t keep chipping, but maybe i’m wrong.
This is a really great job and the time you've invested is evident in the finished product. I have a Black fender strat with a maple fretboard and I want to "relic" it. Your video has given me some valuable insight into how to go about it the right way. Thank you my Friend
Thank you very much. :)
I've been playing the same Strat for 20 years. I wish it looked more beat up, but I'm scared I might regret going at it with a knife.
How to save 1,000+ dollars then buying a custom shop
Love that daphne blue!! Great guitar color to use during an outdoor summer concert
sparingly use and careful apply tan shoe polish to slightly add a brown tint to SOME areas of a light pickguard.
Thanks for the info. :)
I bought a MIM new in 98 . It's been my "beater" guitar that gets left out and dinged around as well as played more than the others and it's barely scratched and dinged . You would think 20+ years later it would look reliced but it doesn't . Nice jam at the end !
Thank you very much. : )
Polyurethane finishes are super tough, they simply do not wear the same. I had a 1965 Fender Mustang when I was a teen and the lacquer was super soft, you could literally sink your nails in it. Mine was a slab body and the lacquer was gone where my forearm touched the guitar, I’m sure the finish was already thin by the third me I bought it but it didn’t take me long to wear it all the way to the wood.
People who say they don’t like reliced guitars must be wearing the bluest stiffest jeans of all time. Cause most jeans are faded and made to look worn before you buy them. So does that make you fake also? Hmmm
Wow... that is really good relic job Dave, you should apply to Fender Custom Shop. They will snatch you up. I would suggest though that it is a good idea to go over the relicing with some 500 grain sandpaper to make it look and feel smoother.
Hi Dave, I think it looks too much but at the same time looks too clean.... You need to 'rust' the bridge saddles, screws and pick up magnets by rubbing over with sandpaper and using a cotton bud to paint on vinegar and then leave. This works. Also all the plastics need to be made to look a bit grubby. Soaking in tea / coffee is only part of this. Again, rub plastic parts (pick up covers, knobs ) with 800 grit paper, and then soak in tea and then rub dirt into scratches. Remember LESS IS MORE... Body looks OK but I would rub the whole body with 1000 -1500 -2000 grit paper to take the shine off.
I'm in the "hate it" category.
I fret over a finger nail mark in the wax on my guitars...which actually is a bit of a curse!
Carry on, Pally!!!
I love the look of a worn out guitar and what’s so good about it is that once it’s worn there’s no way you can make it look bad because it would just add to the look
I say have both! A stunning flawless finish guitar that looks like it's from the future, and a guitar that looks like it's seen hitler lol.
if you put on an anodized pickguard and brush down the pickup area of the guard will look sweet
I think you did a great job and I will definitely be using some of your techniques, so thank you :)
However I think Kluson look alikes and genuine fender saddles would do that last bit. Not to mention (and most likely harder to find) a neck that has the adjustment of the trus rod at the heel
Another thing: Wouldn't the wear at the arm rest (and belly cut) not be more natural by being smoothend out between the paint and the wood?
Hey Nice job Dave, I often wondered what you were upto after the guitar shop job. Good to see you enjoying yrself. Just quick question.. Can you remember what the nut width ws on that Entwistle pink strat. I remember it being an awesome neck and now wish id measured it.. any info or ideas on it would be a BIG help. Thanks dave Rock n Roll Carl
Thank you very much Carl and good to hear from you. :)
I sadly can't remember it. I can send you the width of my 62 strat if you'd like?
@@thedavesimpson Oooh yes please dave, thatd be great. can i have the whole neck measurements and i'll get one made up buddy. whats the nut width. love your channel too
@@boatingforbeginners7949 no worries. I'll send some pictures to you over facebook so you can see it as well. :)
@@thedavesimpson oh thankyou so much dave, thats awesome
I envy you, that you can do that. I have relativly good Fender strats and I dare not to do that. I am unskilled and it would certainly end in a desaster. So I let time do the job and let dings come natural. The only thing I have done is darken the white plastic hardware (scratchplate, knobs etc.) I have done it an other way than you, because I only wanted a gentle darkening. I have a method with low risk. I simply but the things in coffee and let them there over night. But it creates only a slight effect. The good thing is, you an do this as often as you want and slightly get more effect. And because i am unskilled the chances are high, that I get some "relic" if I try to repair or setup the guitar.
Thank you for watching. :)
Why is my wood turning from dark brown to white when I relic it? I have a black paint strat with mahogany body?!
I wish this thing was popular with cars....my car would be worth a lot!
It is actually, look up "patina truck" and you'll find plenty.
No guitar neck will ever be truly weathered like that. Every guitarists has it's sweet spots where they play at more then others.
Play Nirvana including endless namelessfor years and put it back together after smashing it. Then cover it with stickers and then sand the stickers an play it for Twenty years. O yeah.....and it's not even nitro. Now it's my favourite guitar and sounds and looks great. My friends thinking it's a custom 😂.
Of course, nothing beats the look of a proper beater thats been thrashed around for 25 years, but a relic look is so much nicer than a spec finish, especially Fender finishes.
This is me after a cup of coffee
nice video - great results - thanks for sharing it ... what about the back of the neck? any tips for getting the look of wear / played-in ?
Thank you very much indeed. I shall do a vid on how to remove the neck finish soonish. I didn't want to do anything to the back of this neck as it feels great the way it is. :)
play it for 30 years that's the answer
you'd know from experience?
Simon Gummer it doesn't work like that if it's a poly finish which almost all strats are these days. that's kind of the point of this video.
Ricky Weimann They still make and sell nitrocellulose finish strats anyway.
Gavin O'D no I know that. I actually own a 62 vintage reissue hot rod strat that I absolutely love that's finished in nitro, it was one of the things I made sure of when I was buying a 62 reissue cause even those were poly unless you got the hot rod version or a custom shop. I was just making a point that almost 80 percent of fenders now are poly finish unless it's a special run or custom shop for the most part.
Ricky Weimann Yea I know, the nitro finish is just something I wish they would put on all their guitars. It's a pity they don't. Guess fender are just getting cheap.
Real nice job but you should have stained those tone pots to a similar colour to the pick guard, leaving them sit over night in black coffee stains them nicely also the pick up covers too
enjoyed very much,really like this strat,let me know if you ever want to sell her😉
Thank you very much and shall do. :)
I know the thing about poly is that it doesn't age as nicely, but my poly Strat is about 10 years old. I've got another that's 29. They're aging quite nicely and naturally. Sure, it's taking them longer but it's very satisfying to see them age.
I'm pretty hard on them
you should use the pencil method on the body
Nice one Dave enjoyed that.. its unique to you and thanks for sharing
Thank you very much. : )
I just play the shit out of them for 10 years, seems to work naturally for me
MrBigboy1057 I've played on one of my guitars for 20 years and one for 18, still looks quite new. Maybe I play in a way that does touch the guitar that much. I always heard from people that I play really hard and aggressive. Oh well. :)
WOOLgum its because of the polyurethane finish that they dont wear down
hi dave, should i protect with some product the parts of the body that are relic and there's only wood?
Nope. They’ll be fine.
After years of learning how to play. Your playing has a kind of honesty. Why then fake the guitar. Guitar players can spot this a mile away.
Because i really liked the way the guitar looked that i modelled this one on and wanted one the same. Thanks for watching. :)
Neil Morgan
Most people use relicing guitars as a playable display or decoration
Not for make believe
Now the real question why do you care
Austin Lucifer Why do you.
It's a heck of a lot more fake to me NOT to create the look you desire. Only morons ever though it was intended to "fool" anyone.
Whatever makes you want to pick up the guitar more to play it goes for me. If that be relicing then go for it! If that be covering it in stickers and duct tape go for it! If that be burning down the lacquer go for it! Or if that be leaving it as is go for it! I mostly hate to see folks buying a real relic guitar and having it locked behind the glass as a decoration. Whats the effing story with that. Sure its "real" but its not playing anymore! Job well done Dave! Your playing awesome as per usual!
looks nice but i think it needs more smaller dings. I have a les paul jr I have played a ton and it is covered with small dings and scratches but there are only 2 places where the wood is actually showing.
you haters need to chill the fuck out. his guitar and he can do what he wants with it. Sorry that some of us don't have $15000+ for a vintage fender. I don't even have a fender! I have a really good knock off that I'm working on making look vintage at the moment. it's surf green and I'm really taking my time on it cause I want it to look beat to shit but believe able at the same time and I think this is a great video for any body looking to relic their guitar.
Thank you very very much indeed and you have hit the nail right on the head. If its not your guitar then what does it matter.
Ian Paice. Deep Purple's drummer once trashed him drum kit on stage back in the 70s and he got flak for it in the music press and he got sick of it and said
"I bought it so I can break it".
Thank you again and i hope you guitar looks great once its done. :)
chuck Core ^_^
Accidentally I discovered the best way to age the paint me king it look like a real vintage guitar, put the body in your kitchen oven at medium temperature for an hour or two you'll see how it works, really looks like the passing of decades,then you can give specific treatment to some areas.. don't ask how I discovered that...
Jean Loop go on spill the beans how did you accidentally leave a guitar body in a kitchen oven?
I have a 60s Japanese guitar and isn't that relic, whoever owned it took good care of it or just didn't play it like yeaaa has chips here and there but nothing major
Nice. : )
Question: Does sanding off Nitro present a health risk? I understand the precautions to take to protect your skin and lungs while sanding. Yet, I will be pressing my arm against the guitar body that now has exposed nitro. Could rubbing against this now sanded nitro cause potential skin issues?
I just came up with a brilliant idea. Relic cars, straight from the factory. BRB gonna call toyota ask them to ding up the car a bit, add some keyed scratches.. boom!! $5k more.
Thanks for this 😊😊 once you expose the wood on the body, do you use pencil lead to put age on it like the fretboard?
I do yeps. :)
@@thedavesimpson thanks so much!
No hate here... seems equivalent to buying pre ripped jeans. Or I guess intentionally ripping them.
I like to earn my wear and tear. But this is cool. Definitely what I'm working on having my geetar look like in a few years.
More like faded jeans, IMO. Ripped jeans will continue to rip and won't last long. Relicing doesn't take any significant service life out of the guitar.
This made me want to make my guitar look like this so I'm going to pick it up and play it
One can't just fail when it comes to ruin a nice guitar. lol
If ever ...once in quite a while ... i could do this ... probably to a friends guitar ... i hopefully will remember this great instruction video (;-))
I personally do customize my guitars too ... but its more or less changing the guts ... PUs, pots, treble bleeder, serial/parallel-switch, split coil via push-pull-pot ...
Anyway ... great instructive video ... as always (;-)) Merzi villemals!
Thank you very much indeed. :)
In 20 years my Strat is still going to look new. I’m just very careful with it. And I can’t afford another one.
I also prefer relic strats, but I would like to get new and relic it with the time and playing. I have one for almost 10 years, playing really frequently and looks like new, I even dropped it once or twice from the chair and nothing.... the back of the neck looks a little bit sore, but that it..... let see if I get brave enough to do something like this
I preffer my guitars grow old with me, use by use it them
Alright! Cool info and nice playing at the end. Do you have a video on the actual putting together of the guitar?
Thank you very much. I don't have any vids on that yet but i shall have in the future. : )