1.) Purchased 3 bottles of nitro lacquer from "Reranch" -- a place on the internet that sells nitro-paint products in aerosol cans. Ingenious! I bought one honey-blond, one black, one clear-coat nitro. Check them out, they have really cool stuff, and great instructions in their forums.
2.) Moved it to the porch, and laid down layer after layer of the honey-blond. Here it is painted up real nice:
I didn't do a prime coat first, because ash is a dense wood, and doesn't always require a primer coat. I just went straight spray-can to wood.
So this, if I wanted, could be the end, and I'd have a pretty straight-f0rward classic looking telecaster. But I wanted to do something a little more edgy.
3.) So I grabbed the black can, and kinda attempted a sort of burst outwards from the center, with the edges darker black. The result was as follows:
The back was a little trickier, as it had picked up alot of newspaper from the TOP of the guitar's sides getting sprayed. So it looked like this:
I'd say for the most pa
After that, I can get into the nitro-finish. That's what I'm truly dreading. Apparently you have to do all these coats, and then wet-sand them in between. It just sounds like a bitch of a job. This whole refinishing nonsense is NOT what I originally intended to do, but now that it's almost done, I'm kinda glad it happened. The more of the project I put together myself, the more the guitar is truly mine.
I'm gonna try to wrap up the painting this weekend, let it dry out real good over the week, and then start doing the nitro clear-coat finishes next weekend. Once that's all finished, I'll have to start picking up the nuts and bolts to put this sucker together: pickguard, tone pots, selector switch, bridge plate, bridge saddles, etc. And the biggest decision of them all: What pickups to use? I have a brand in mind, but we'll have to see if I can get lucky off craigslist, cause they're expensive.
until later.