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Bindings & Purflings
Mark has bent some Macassar Ebony bindings with curly Koa purflings.
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End Graft
Now that the Brazilian Rosewood body has had it’s binding and purfling channels routed, it is time to route and install an end graft. Here’s Mark’s routing jig for the end graft. That’s a 1978 Porter Cable router which Mark has changed out the bearings on 6 times!
https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...6A8D605FC.jpeg The Bristlecone’s end graft is contrasting Macassar Ebony with curly Koa purflings to match the binding design. https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...C4C77E6DE.jpeg |
Binding the Box
Mark is installing the top 0.080” Macassar Ebony top binding framed with 0.050” Koa/0.020” Black Fiber top and 0.040” Koa side purflings with titebond 1 glue.
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Rosette & Purflings
You can now begin to see how the curly Koa top purfling will visually tie together with the Koa accents in the radial grained Brazilian Rosewood rosette. Not a traditional “blingy” look like shell or marquetry, but I think that these hardwood accents will make an elegant and handsome look. The small shim in the purfling near the continuous cutaway neck junction is there to ensure the binding junction smoothly transitions into the neck.
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Wow--I agree. Beautifully elegant!
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Exquisite! :)
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Box Bound
Mark has completed Macassar Ebony binding and curly Koa purflings the Brazilian Rosewood “box”.
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I like my bindings to be hardwood and usually using a very hard species such as ebonies, rosewoods, hard maple or even satinwood. Binding’s function is to protect the guitar from dings. When the back and sides are visually dark, homogeneous and plain as with this set of Brazilian Rosewood, a bit of figure in a purfling can be nice. The Koa will show a bit of curl and mottle once under finish...:) |
It certainly has a classic elegance. I didn't know that Koa was typically used as a binding material -- although Nick Kuckich told me he just built an all Koa guitar, with Koa bindings.
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Yes, I have also seen many guitars bound in curly Koa. It is a beautiful figured binding material. That said, functionally, I am not a fan because it is a relatively soft hardwood. This defeats the protection purpose of binding in my view. As a purfling material however it is a great visual accenting choice against a dark binding.
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Neck Set
Mark was able to set the neck today so it is beginning to look like a guitar. Creating a Macassar Ebony/Koa purfled heel cap and roughing in the Gaboon Ebony fingerboard radius are next tasks ahead of him.
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What Fret #?
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Roughing in a Compound Radius
Mark is roughing in the compound 14” to 18” fingerboard radius. The bridge is not glued on to the top yet, it’s just sitting there. He uses a straightedge to project the fingerboard plane out to the bridge to verify and adjust the neck angle on both the bass and treble sides.
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It’s starting to look great, Bob! :up:
I love them at this stage, and yours does not disappoint. |
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Carving the neck
Mark is carving the neck. I like a neck with a bit of “meat” to it, and he shapes it with an asymmetric cross sectional profile. This is Mark’s standard neck profile which I found comfortable on the Pinyon that he made for me 6 years ago. He installed a Macassar Ebony/Koa heel cap to match the body bindings/purflings.
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That's really looking great Bob. Really clean and lovely wood choices :up:
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Coming together
Mark sent me sent me a photo showing that he added a concave fretboard terminus that is concentric with the inner ring of the rosette. The 21st fret lines up with the outer ring of the rosette as well. You can also begin to see how the curly Koa rings of the radial Brazilian Rosewood rosette visually harmonize with the curly Koa top purflings. The Macassar Ebony binding also ties in with the Gaboon Ebony fretboard. The guitar should be done in “white” fairly soon.
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A bit-o-pore filler
Mark sent me some photos showing the body with epoxy pore filler applied. You can finally see a hint of what the koa purflings are going to look like against the Brazilian Rosewood.
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Ready for finish
Back to bare wood (except for the pores). Hangers attached… ready for sealer
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Very Swanky
Elegant and classy! I especially like the flamed Koa purflings and the bookmatched Headstock overlay.
I am also a fairly recent convert to asymmetrical neck carves. You must be getting itchy now... Salud Paul |
Thanks for the kind words, but it is still a ways off...:)
Mark applies his nitro finish slowly allowing for drying time between coats. He also allows for a good month for it to dry before buffing. Another week for assembly followed two weeks to settle in. So it is like 2+ months until it makes the journey from the High Sierra to the East Coast. Quote:
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As part of finishing...
Mark sprays shellac on his guitar tops to protect it during his construction process. After pore filling, he sands the back and side to only leave residual epoxy in the rosewood pores. Mark sprays on vinyl sealer onto the back and sides to prepare them to accept nitro. When he applies the vinyl sealer to the sides, some overspray always ends up on the top but it is protected by the shellac. He leaves the shellac on until the back and sides receive about 6 coats of nitro. He then sands off the shellac and vinyl sealer overspray from the Italian Spruce top and does his final thinning/tuning of the sound board (if needed).
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Awesome thread
I just re-read this entire thread. Boy, there is a LOT of very interesting technical info above!
The axe sure looks beautiful, and I too hope to play one of Mark's beauties some day soon. Thanks for sharing all of this with all of us! Salud Paul |
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He did learn the tool of Chladni from Al Carruth in the mid 1990s and he developed his own way of integrating it into his build process to help him guide decisions and improve his consistency of outcomes. Keeping careful notebooks on every guitar coming off his bench has helped him interpret characteristics associated with his best sounding work. He also learned the basics of archtop guitar construction through a course taught by Linda Manzer and Tom Ribbecke. Mark pasted along some of his approach to Chladni methods teaching luthier Randall “Sparky” Kramer. He designed, patented and manufactures his own double acting truss rods as well. While he has been building custom instruments for over 25 years now, Mark is a quiet guy who now lives in the Sierras. He has a website, makes some guitars for a well known reseller and attends luthier exhibitions. Despite this, I don’t feel that he is widely known enough among the AGF custom acoustic guitar community. Fellow luthiers all know and respect him and his work, but I don’t think there are more than a few threads here on AGF exhibiting his work across the 20-years that this site has been around. His guitars are unique in their construction and in their tone and that is why I am back to have him build me a second guitar. |
Bob, your posts are some of my favorite - so interesting and educational...and you have great taste. This guitar looks like another masterpiece. The BRW is exceptional.
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