Hi.
Thanks for the kind words
I wanted to buy a Jazzmaster about 2 years ago, and as I was saving funds for it, I did the same thing we all do with GAS, and I googled "Jazzmaster" repeatedly. I'd watch them on teh ebayz, and on craig's list, and I'd just obsess over the guitar. One google search brought me to a website where a guy actually built one totally from scratch, using many narrow strips of wood joined to make the body. He made it look so easy! "Screw saving the $1,200+ for a Jazzmaster, I'll just make one!" so I spent $60 on a cheap router, $19 on a Central Machinery drill press, and $15 on some poplar, to build my first guitar... Which SUCKED. But I ended up putting the wonky body on eBay and got $75 for it, so I then used that money to buy some walnut, and I made my second guitar (which also sucked).
But I had a great time making it, and I was convinced I could do better! I didn't want to start buying $65+ "guitar body blanks" until I knew I could cut a body well and shape it properly (and consistently), so I'd buy cheap pine and poplar, and make bodies with crappy wood (apparently pretty quickly). With only the internet, as an absent teacher, I made about 30 bodies, each one a little cleaner than the one before.
Eventually I started building necks, specifically because I wanted to try unique scale lengths, and unusual woods.
So, I spent a long time using the cheapest materials I could, because I knew I wouldn't be making top quality guitars for a while, and I would rather ruin a $40 acrylic lacquer finish than a $100 Reranch finish. I'm still very far from where I'd like to be. But I'm finding myself at a point where I don't want to use cheap wood, I want to stick with the good stuff, and I don't want to use budget pickups or parts, either. I need to either step it up, or stop, because even though I asked $500 for that guitar, I sold it for what it cost me to make it ($150). And until I am making top of the line guitars, using only top of the line materials, I don't intend to make a profit doing this- it's all for fun
PS: regarding "Why does he still do hair?"
I recently started doing haircuts for a long time employee in the custom shop of a well known musical instrument corporation located in my town, and have been rubbing elbows with everyone I can over there, so I can quit cutting hair some day...
