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#16
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Quote:
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2008 Taylor Custom GS Adirondack, Cocobolo "Camille" 2008 Taylor GA4 Sitka, Ovangkol "Oscar" 2001 Martin 000-16 LTD Edition Sitka, Rosewood "Emma" In the hands of new owners 2005 Taylor T5-S1 Blue Edgeburst Maple, Sapelle 2009 Taylor 716ce Spring LTD Sitka, Madagascar Rosewood "Maddie" |
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#17
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I got sensitive to the appearance when someone at a gig said it was a shame to clutter the beautiful top with the bubbles.
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----------- Taylor Koa GS Ltd. Gibson Hummingbird Cort SJ5 Cutaway Fender P Bass Fender Strat Plus |
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#18
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no guard IMO....less pressure on the face of the guitar = more resonance= sweetness!
plus.....i like the look of the guitar when the finish starts to wear away...shows character...unless your trying to re-sell later
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"Your life is shaped by the end you live for. You are made in the image of what you desire." -Thomas Merton Matthew A. Klimis, P.A., Realtor Anclote Key Realty, Inc. www.anclotekeyrealty.com Worship Leader http://www.myspace.com/matthewklimis1 |
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#19
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Flip a coin. I went with the Taylor cling-guard on my GS from the day I got it. The folks at taylor made that line, the GS, without a pick guard to show off the nice woods and simple no-bells setup of the model so I think the clear guard is a great idea. By the way, I am not sure about the MIST and apply. I just put it on real slow and the static cling took it from their-no water needed. And someone else mentioned this and I absolutely agree...you have to really look hard to tell its even on your guitar. Its inexpensive, simple and it works. If I'd have wanted a tortoise pick guard on my GS I probably would have gotten one with a tortoise pick guard. My two cents.
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Fight the Good Fight - Keep the Faith. II Tim. 4:7 Taylor GSrc K&K pure- joy Breedlove OM/SM Atlas Retro Martin LXME- indespinsable Alvarez- 50 smackers www.austintistic.blogspot.com |
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#20
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I have two Taylors and both came with guards on them. My choice was buy them or not. I never thought of myself as a hard strummer but one thing I noticed the other day is that both guards have very slight pick scratches on them. I always use a thin pick when I use a pic. I wonder if the plastic is softer than the finish Taylor uses. I am also in the process of designing a BTO so I guess I had better make up my mind on if I want it to have a pick guard or not and if I do go with one, which one. Decisions,decisions
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2010 Taylor Custom GAK 2007 Taylor 214e 2000 Martin D1-R 1967 Harmony Classical |
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#21
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Quote:
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2008 Taylor Custom GS Adirondack, Cocobolo "Camille" 2008 Taylor GA4 Sitka, Ovangkol "Oscar" 2001 Martin 000-16 LTD Edition Sitka, Rosewood "Emma" In the hands of new owners 2005 Taylor T5-S1 Blue Edgeburst Maple, Sapelle 2009 Taylor 716ce Spring LTD Sitka, Madagascar Rosewood "Maddie" |
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#22
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I'm with you; I don't like the tortoise-shell, or in fact ANY pickguard hiding a pretty piece of wood, when there is a viable alternative out there. As for the wet method .... I don't use it, on these nor on my sign vinyls, which use adhesive. If you start at one edge and squeegee as you go, it shouldn't be necessary. |
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#23
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Those unsightly (at least to me) pickmarks CAN be polished away, but by doing that, you're effectively trading small scratches for even smaller ones. "Polish" is nothing more than a fine abrasive. For example, when you're polishing a car with a buffer, and stay too long on a body edge, you'll buff completely through the finish. That's a lot more extreme than this, but you don't keep a car for a lifetime, either. Repeated "polishing" will eventually degrade the finish, because it's actually "abrading" it, a little at a time. The simple expedient of an inexpensive, removable alternative completely (and unobtrusively) prevents that.
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#24
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To my the word "pickguard" is a bit of a misnomer. For example, if you anchor with your pinkie at all, then you are rubbing on the top and should have a guard.
There are many many techniques that can cause wear. For whatever reason my (significant) wear is on the lower inside edge of my soundhole, and only on my Taylor jumbo. For 20 years I have had the same beater dred that I leave out on my wall and play constantly, and go figure, it has zero top wear.
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Mike 2001 Taylor 415 and a 12-string and a beater |
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#25
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IMO no, I have a K-26ce, came with no pick guard, I use the removable clear guard from Taylor, goes the trick and does not detract from the look of the guitar.
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jjracer: if I'm not here.... I am somewhere else... ![]() guitars? yep still have some |
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#26
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I like the look of wear! Not "distressed" or "relic" style mind you, but real, honest-to-goodness battle scars from playing. The look of a guitar wielded in battle is a beautiful thing.
Yeah, I know I know ...they are gorgeous in showroom condition. My 655 quilted is drop-dead beautiful, and I try to keep it that way. But once my GA7 got her first good ding (down to the wood, right on the top, ouch!), I see it as badge of honor use. So apply a pickguard if you like the look; leave it off if you prefer that. But I would not base my decision on "protection" ...just play it and enjoy every note! Edward |
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