That was my profession for 42 years. Luthiery, especially the detailed stuff, brings back memories. At the end of the day, I would come home stiff and clenched because every procedure had to be spot on - mistakes were hard to cover (or explain!!!) <LOL!>.
Memories flooded back as I routed a new slot for the rosette. I hoped that the circle jig that I had for my Dremel was up to the task. And memories of a slipped router depth setting while cutting the binding channel on my last guitar still had me on edge.
Two weeks earlier, I re-discovered a small shop about ten miles away that sells inlay (Masecraft Supply, Meriden, CT). In their 10 x 20 showroom, they had thousands of inlays in their drawers. Here's what came back with me:
I had purchased this circle jig years ago and never used it. It only took about an hour of searching to remember where I had stored it!
Here, I removed most of the rosette that came installed in the soundboard. Fortunately, it worked perfectly. Part of my success was the workboard that I used as a base (REALLY nice baltic birch left over from our kitchen cabinets). I drilled a precise pivot hole for the Dremel and went slowly. The bits were from StewMac. No way was I going to cut corners with some cheap EBay inlay bits - I only had one chance to get it right.
You can bet that I was clenching every part of my body as I made the multiple passes necessary to create the slot.