Teh Burndtz - More pictures up.
Moderated By: mods
I met up with teh Kurdtz today to ask about the guitar, and got more than I had expected. Being a portrait artist (and a very good one at that), he took the arty-farty route and had some fun with it.
The formerly-SBL Jagstang was partially damaged in a house fire, but that had almost nothing to do with what you see. He stripped the poly finish off by hand, sanded and dunked the hardware in bleach, burned the head stock, inked the fretboard, and applied a few coats of burnt ochre and burnt sienna (oil paint!) on the bare body plank. He finished it with a matte clearcoat, then proceeded to burn it in strageic places before reinstalling the electronics. The neck pickup deal was done locally for about $35 by a somewhat reluctant electronics guys, who tucked the p'up cover with 6 LEDs and a 9v-powered circuit that responds to dynamics (loud=bright). Kurt is gonna send me some better photos, as he said the above shots don't give a proper color representation of the paint applied. Hmm...
I'll post them when I get 'em.
EDIT: um...edited
The formerly-SBL Jagstang was partially damaged in a house fire, but that had almost nothing to do with what you see. He stripped the poly finish off by hand, sanded and dunked the hardware in bleach, burned the head stock, inked the fretboard, and applied a few coats of burnt ochre and burnt sienna (oil paint!) on the bare body plank. He finished it with a matte clearcoat, then proceeded to burn it in strageic places before reinstalling the electronics. The neck pickup deal was done locally for about $35 by a somewhat reluctant electronics guys, who tucked the p'up cover with 6 LEDs and a 9v-powered circuit that responds to dynamics (loud=bright). Kurt is gonna send me some better photos, as he said the above shots don't give a proper color representation of the paint applied. Hmm...
I'll post them when I get 'em.
EDIT: um...edited
Last edited by ultratwin on Sun May 24, 2009 2:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
The house fire that destroyed nearly all he had only heated up the guitar enough to taint the color of the pickguard, with additional burning done only on the lower bout and headstock to give some real charcoal action. He chiseled off the finish and left just a little bit on top, and used burnt sienna and burnt umber (not ochre) oil paints to color the body. The fretboard is indeed painted to show wear, and he intentionally doesn't oil the fretboard, adding to the cruddy rosewood effect. Take a look at the headstock though. I don't know what it was, but gunk apparently oozed out of them due to the heat from the house fire (visible on the A string machine head). And yeah, he did in fact have the whole thing disassembled before doing the work and kept the hardware in bleach for a few days to corrode it just enough.
What can I say? The dude's a portrait artist, and the savaged Stang was his canvas for a delightfully ugly face. I dig.
What can I say? The dude's a portrait artist, and the savaged Stang was his canvas for a delightfully ugly face. I dig.
- matocaster
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I REALLY like that!!! Not so much the LED's maybe if they were red? Na, no led's
“I need to take a piece of wood and make it sound like the railroad track, but I also had to make it beautiful and lovable so a person playing it would think of it in terms of his mistress, a bartender, his wife, a good psychiatrist - whatever.� Les Paul
- hotrodperlmutter
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