Fresh wood
Posted: Thu Aug 18, 2016 6:34 pm
I have a friend that lives on a farm on top of mountain West Virginia - it is Big Bend mountain, and the tunnel that John Henry died drilling explosives holes in is directly below him. He had some Ash trees die of the Ash Borer and he took them down. I had him save me a length of log, and when I visited in June we split a nice length out for me. The log was about 22" across.
I have a friend who is a pro woodworker and timber framer, and I visited his shop today. In less than 50 minutes I left with a stack of guitar wood - he really knows how to handle large pieces. His big bandsaw only has a 2-1/2" tall fence, but the slices are dead even.
The pieces are 8-1/2" at the wide end, the grain in all 10 pieces is quite vertical, and the neck piece looks great.
I am thinking of a 1930's L-0, ash all around including the top and neck, natural finish, Ivoroid binding, Abalone and green strips for the purfling, end grain Ivoroid, Abalone, and green in the rosette, and a Rosewood fingerboard and bridge to echo the brown tone of the ash.
A couple more pictures here with some text
https://www.flickr.com/photos/ruby1638/ ... 458169080/
Ed
I have a friend who is a pro woodworker and timber framer, and I visited his shop today. In less than 50 minutes I left with a stack of guitar wood - he really knows how to handle large pieces. His big bandsaw only has a 2-1/2" tall fence, but the slices are dead even.
The pieces are 8-1/2" at the wide end, the grain in all 10 pieces is quite vertical, and the neck piece looks great.
I am thinking of a 1930's L-0, ash all around including the top and neck, natural finish, Ivoroid binding, Abalone and green strips for the purfling, end grain Ivoroid, Abalone, and green in the rosette, and a Rosewood fingerboard and bridge to echo the brown tone of the ash.
A couple more pictures here with some text
https://www.flickr.com/photos/ruby1638/ ... 458169080/
Ed