Paint Your Guitar Sunburst
Transcription
Paint Your Guitar Sunburst
Paint Your Guitar Sunburst Henry Potdevin Opus Magnum Editions Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 1 To all my beloved ones for their pacience, understanding and their expressions of joy. 2 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Paint Your Guitar Sunburst Henry Potdevin © Copyright - Henry Potdevin - 2009 All rights reserved Any duplication, adaptation or arragement of the compositions contained in this book requieres the written consent of the publisher. vers. 20090115c www.lepotdevin.com Opus Magnum Editions Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 3 Introduction I have dreamed with this Beatle guitar since childhood. I was fascinated with its shape and curves, its elegant binding, the bright color combination with the magical color fading from one color into the other, the shinny chrome parts and the flashing gloss finish. Additionally, the rich musical tones played on this guitar by the Beatles, and early Rolling Stones records, made this guitar a must have. When I decided to get my own I was faced with many problems. First, not all Casinos are sunburst on both sides like I wished for. Lennon’s was dark brown on the back side, which I did not want. I also had preference for McCartney’s and Harrison’s models which included a Bigsby but when Epiphone offered a Casino sunburst with Bigsby special edition in 2006, I was not able to get one. From the Internet I studied many Casinos which had features I did not like at all such as: clownish batches of color on the lateral sides (I prefer the sides to be totally black), dark brown necks (I prefer scarlet) and there are Casinos that have been painted yellow in the central part of the neck. Even worse, lately sunburst Casinos are only comming with totally black horns. I was in a terrible dilemma. If I would go ahead and buy one, most probably, I would get features I would not like. Many times, I went to a store to find they only had a natural finish model available. They would offer to order a sunburst version for me, through the internet, which would have wound up in a surprise and total frustration. That is why I decided to buy a natural finish Casino and paint it my way. I am proud to have taken this decision and now I have the sexiest guitar ever. Henry Potdevin Jan 2009 4 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Contents 6 16 A little background from this guitar The Epiphone Casino´s colors 18 19 20 22 23 24 26 28 29 What we need for the job Steps of the process Planning and preparing for the job Work space Work bench Preparing dyes and laquer Finish coat facts Spray gun Tests and practice 30 32 34 41 42 44 46 50 Disassembling the guitar Masks Cutting the masks Wood sanding and stripping Masking tape Guitar binding masking Workbench ironwork Mounting the guitar on the roaster 52 54 56 60 66 68 70 71 73 Paint plan First color: yellow dye Second color: red dye Third color: black dye Examining the dye work Three attempts Applying laquer Sanding laquer Buffing 74 75 Assembling the guitar Finished work first pictures 81 Trouble shooting 86 Behind the scenes Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 5 A little background from this guitar John Lennon tests Paul´s new Casino. Back to Contents Paul McCartney buys his Casino in 1964. Dave Davies from The Kinks - 1964 John Lennon and George Harrison both acquire their own Casinos in early 1966. Keith Richard from the Rolling Stones - 1964 6 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com BBC´s Top Of The Pops show - June 1966. The Beatles presented «Paper Back Writer» and «Rain». Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 7 Beatles Rubber Soul World Tour June - August 1966 Back to Contents 8 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 9 Revolver 1966 George and Paul play the lead guitar duo on «And Your Bird Can Sing». Paul plays lead on «Taxman» 10 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com John plays rythm guitar in «Here There and Everywhere» and «Doctor Robert» Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 11 The Beatle Guitar 12 1967 - Sargeant Pepper´s recordings Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 1967 - Magical Mistery Tour Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 13 1968 - White Album Hey Bulldog Paul plays all instruments in «Back in The USSR» Hey Jude 14 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 1969 Let It Be & Abbey Road Paul McCartney after the Beatles Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 15 The Epiphone Casino´s colors Same guitar model, different looks. Back to Contents 16 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Sunburst on an ES-335 type guitar And here is our objective accomplished. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 17 What we need for the job Back to Contents Do a Sunburst Finish We will paint an Epiphone Casino with a natural finish and turn it to sunburst. Taking advantage of maple’s pale tone, we will paint directly onto the guitar without sanding down the factory original finish. What we needed: Air brush spray gun Compressor Air hose (1/4») 5 to 10 meter long Dyes (alcohol) Yellow, Scarlet Red and Black Thinner Nitrocellulose Lacquer Empty bottles with screw cap or cork Teflon tape Graduated beaker or glass measuring cup Polystyrene tablet (plastic) Blue masking tape (or elastic preferably) Electric Drill Electric Jigsaw Dremell drill Screw drivers Clamps Pencil, marker, ballpoint pen Fine art knife Metallic straight edge Cardboard (white) Heavy industrial thick gray cardboard Scissors Pictures and illustrations of the paint process by Henry Potdevin. 18 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Steps of the process Gathering materials Making a guitar work bench (paint bench actually) Preparing work space Preparing dyes and lacquer Tests and practice Disassembling the guitar Cutting masks Wood sand stripping (not on this job) Masking with tape Mounting the guitar on the roaster (workbench) Painting with dyes Retouching and checking Painting with lacquer Drying Buffing Assembling the guitar Timming: This proyect will take several weeks for completion. In optimal conditions, this would be your schedule: Day 1 - Assembling work bench Disassembling guitar Day 2 - Tracing masks Cutting masks, Day 3 - Masking guitar binding, fret board, stuffing and mounting on work bench Day 4 - Yellow - 10 coats. One every hour. Day 5 - Red - 10 coats. One every hour. Day 6 - Black - 10 coats. One every hour. Day 7 - Retouching Day 8 - Lacquer - 10 coats. One every hour. Day 9 - Lacquer - 10 coats. One every hour. Day 10 - Drying - several days (or weeks) Day 11 - Polishing and assembling Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 19 Planning and preparing for the job The drawings show the plans for the necessary Ironwork to hold the guitar in place and allow it a rotary movement. 20 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Back to Contents Ironwork Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 21 Work space Back to Contents Assembly table Paint mixing bench Rotary saddle You should be able to walk around the object and point your spray gun from different angles with ease. The height position of the guitar should allow you to spray onto it comfortably from above. 22 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Work Bench Building a guitar work bench (paint bench actually) Rotary stand for a TV set A pine wooden board is the bench´s main part. Observe placing the ironwork in place. Fixing rotary stand to board From my kitchen, I found this step ladder useful to support the rotary work bench. A simple keel through the center hole was enough to obtain a sturdy bench. The keel was fixed onto the board with glue and three screws. Fixing the tv rotary stand to the wood anchor. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 23 Preparing dyes and lacquer Use top quality products: dyes, thinner and lacquer. For this job I used «The Guitar ReRanch» Alcohol-Soluble Dyes (Transfast Wood Dyes by Homestead) one quart / one liter Dye preparation one jar of dye powder (2 oz.) into one quart of solvent (thinner) Personal observations: Slow drying. Oily. Sticky. ReRanch Yellow After numerous coatings, dye will react and tiny unpainted spots appear all of a sudden. If this occurs, the yellow coating can then be wiped off with a rag soaked in thinner. Then you are ready to start again. The problem can be corrected mixing one part of yellow dye solution with one part of nitrocellulose lacquer solution. This will accelerate drying time between coats and will hold the dye much better to the surface. Back to Contents How many coats? Too few coats will not produce a vivid color. Too many coats will darken your work and hide the figures and strikes of the wood grain. Testing before starting It is highly recommendable you test paint on a similar piece of wood before you proceed to apply stain onto your guitar. Try to make a sunburst effect. Play around a little and get to know well the products you are using the same as your air brush, compressor, masks, etc. Determine coat density, drying time between coats and climatic factors that can influence the quality of your work. Drying: at least 1 hour between coatings ReRanch Scarlet Red: Quick drying.Good coverage. Do not mix solution with nitrocellulose lacquer. Lacquer will emulsify and separate from the dye solution forming blotches. Drying: 1 hour between coatings ReRanch Black: Quick dry Drying: 1 hour between coatings 24 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Half the quantity of dye concentrate in the jar is more than enough to paint the whole guitar. Just pile the contents onto a piece of paper and divide the powder in half with a knife. Raise the piece of paper and pour the powder through a funnel into a bottle. A bottle of wine will normaly have a capacity of 750 ml. For 1 ounce of dye powder you must add 500 ml (half a liter) of solvent. Let the dyes dissolve well; you can leave them overnight to avoid pigment specs on your work surface. Also, stir or shake well. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com The process is the same for the other two colors. Label your bottles for future reference. 25 Finish coat facts Today’s guitars, like this Epiphone Casino produced in China, are mainly finished with polyurethane (polymer). You can apply nitrocellulose lacquer over polyurethane, but you can not do the opposite. Since we do not want to sand down the original finish and polyurethane is a reactive coating that will not redissolve once it is cured, nitrocellulose laquer will be the ideal substance to apply with our work due to its adherent properties. Take into consideration that nitro laquer dries out very slowly. Although it will develop a dry skin in a few minutes, underneath it will remain as a gelatine for days and even months. Eventualy, after several years it will shrink to a very thin and hard coating. Do not expect to be using your guitar too soon after finishing the whole paint job. You will probably have to let the finish coat solvent evaporate for at least one month before assembling the guitar. It is also wise to wait another month or more to fully start playing the instrument. Some facts about finishing products Back in the 1950’s and 1960’s guitars were commonly finished with nitrocellulose laquer. Back to Contents lyester and acrilic finishes started becoming popular due to performance trends such as high productivity and good looking crystal clear finishes. Polyurethane pros (oil based) Easy to apply, very hard and strong finish, quick drying, very clear, high gloss long lasting finish, much more resitant to chipping and scratching than nitrocellulose. Polyurethane contras Thick coatings (although not as thick as polyester), dents and chipping from impacts are hard to repair. Nitrocellulose laquer pros Inexpensive, easy to apply, fairly easy to repair, will melt and fuse with previous nitro coatings, will evolve into a very thin and hard coating. It is ideal for acoustic guitars since a very thin finishing will allow better wood oscillation for resonance. Nitrocellulose laquer contras Slow drying, will age into a yellowish antique tone and will crack over time, probably due to the shrinking process it is inherent to. Other facts to consider Slowly polyurethane and other products such as po- 26 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Nitrocellulose Laquer - Clear 1 liter (quart) Laquer preparation Nitocelulose Laquer will mix with fine thinner in a proportion of: 1 part of laquer to 2 parts of thinner. As manufacturers seek more efficient and durable finishes many have begun using finishes other than lacquer. In fact there are so many different finishes being used that it’s easy to get confused. It is often best to call the factory with the instruments build date or serial number to determine exactly what finish was used and what repair options are available. - www.fretnotguitrrepair.com Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 27 Spray Gun Back to Contents Airbrush type: HVLP (high volume low pressure). I recommend buying a model with a cup that can tilt so you can fire downward or at any other angle. Compressor: Craftsman 125 PSI, 3 gallons, 1.5 hp or similar. Air pressure: 43 to 70 PSI (70 is maximum for this type of airbrush). I use 43. Distance: - how far away will you be spraying. Hold your spray gun 20 to 25 cm (8 to 10 inches) away from paint surface. Appropriate distance will let you maintain total control of your job. Too near will soak the surface and create crater like effects or streaks. Paint will run and drip ruining your paint job. Too far away paint will not reach the surface or will be dry before it does. Most mayor paint problems derive from painting too close to the paint surface. Avoid suffering, frustration and waste of time. Paint from an appropriate distance. Be patient. Do many coats instead of soaking your guitar with excess paint. Application: Correct: Fire the spray gun traveling with your whole body; not just moving your arm. Shoot perpendicular to the surface at all times. Incorrect: Wrist swing In what direction? Paint parallel along the wood grain. 28 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Tests and practice Calibrating your spray gun for each job: Make tests. Be sure to have some practice on another piece of wood other than your guitar. Previously test your abilities, equipment and products. Do not experiment on your guitar. Get to know your airbrush intimately. 1. Delicate and small paint areas (example: Sunburst red and black areas or for retouching) Pattern: Round or oval Fluid: very small amount of fluid Air: Very little air Test for minimum spray possible. This is useful for tiny spaces and for retouching. 2. Central guitar surfaces (yellow parts) Airbrush adjustment and calibration: Your airbrush has three knobs for adjusting and calibrating spray: Pattern: fan Fluid: medium to high Air: medium (remember this also depends on the viscosity) 1. Pattern - choose a paint pattern Round - ccw Oval - cw turn knob counter clock wise Tips: Always fire a few spray shots on an auxiliary board before applying paint on your guitar. clockwise Nozzle adjustment horizontal fan vertical fan 2. Fluid - graduate the amount of fluid delicate spray - for edges or corners heavy spray - for large print areas such as central body parts. more fluid - ccw less fluid - cw 3. Air - according to viscosity more air - ccw less air - cw Note: sometimes turning the knobs around back and forth will not make any noticeable spray difference. Try to find the position where you can make fine adjustments. Once you find it, a slight turn makes a big difference. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Try not to trigger directly onto your work. You should enter spraying the guitar area from outside the guitar borders, sliding the spray off from a hand held mask or cardboard and onto your guitar. Do not stop in the middle of the trajectory. Always keep the spray gun in motion. The spray gun should be in motion before you pull on the trigger and after you release it. Always point the spray gun at a right angle from the paint surface, if possible. Time: Be patient. Take long ! Let coatings dry sufficiently. Let dry from one day to another. Don’t rush ! Allow at least one hour between coats. Don´t Rush Do not soak Keep your distance Beware of dirt and fluff 29 Disassembling the guitar Back to Contents For disassembling the guitar, lay it on a comfortable desk or table and protect the finish with a cloth cushion. Carefully unscrew all accessories. The neck pickup comes out through the bridge pickup hole. With a small mirror check the inside to detach one cable that is clipped underneath thewood top. Take your time and register where each part comes out from. Note the ground cable that peeps out and contacts the metal tailpiece. Recording ring heights can be helpful when assembly moment arrives. Two cardboard pieces can help you mark the height of the bridge rings for calibration. 30 The plastic knobs and the bridge thuds will be a little hard to extract but a strong hand can exert enough pressure to pull them out. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Take notes Register where each part comes out from. You don´t know how much time is going to go by before you assemble the guitar back again. You can buy or build a neck rest to help support and protect your guitar. With a small hammer gently knock the tunner rings out of their cavities. Try to conserve the original decals on the back of the headstock. You can carefully lift one of their borders with a razor blade or an art knife and then you can just pull them off with your fingers. You can temporarily stick them to the guitar pick guard. Before unscrewing the volume and tone controls (potentiomenters), be sure to tag them with masking tape for quick identification at reassenmbly. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 31 Masks Back to Contents For sunburst finishes floating masks will allow you control of the process much better. Distance between masks and paint surface is aproximately 1.5 cm. Trace the contour of the guitar onto a hard cardboard. A thick grey cardboard will not curve and will stay flat at all times. You will need three masks; one for each color. floating masks Guitar Transversal section This graphic shows what each mask lets through. The yellow mask only lets paint fall in the center and the black mask on the borders of the guitar surface. To abbreviate, in only one drawing, all the masks are shown together. 32 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com To determine the width of the black and red bands of color take an impression of the front side of the guitar by pressing your hand onto a sheet of paper. This will allow you to trace the horns, the f hole and the main curves. Determine the width you would like for the color bands and trace the lines parallel to the border to check how they will look. I used a width of 1.5 cm for each band. With dash line, trace the contour of each of the masks. You can help yourself with a piece of paper as a template to mark the selected width all around the contour. 33 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Cutting the masks Since grey cardboard is thick and hard to cut with an art knife, you will need a jigsaw to do the job. Back to Contents This piece of board will allow us to cut two masks: the black mask and the outer red mask. 34 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Cutting mask separators You need to make your masks float up in the air in order to make the diferent colors softly transition or blend from one to the other. Masks need to be raised from the paint surface about 1.5 cm away. The mask separators shown here have a double purpose: they will hold the masks 1.5 cm away from the guitar surface and they will also fix the mask to the guitar edges. Trace 16 rectangles 3 x 5 cm (30 x 50 mm) The cutaway is 3 x 1 cm The separators have a T shape to glue them onto the mask from underneath. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 35 Back to Contents You can easily cut these straight lines with the jigsaw but some small cuts are better done with an art knife and a metal straight edge. Notice one wing of the T shape is attached to the bottom rectangle. You can cut the two pieces together and with a knife make a half deep cut so you can fold the flap sideways. The other wing of the T shape has to be cut apart and then glued to complete the figure. These are all the pieces ready to be glued to create the T shapes. 36 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com You will also need to build four boxes to fit into the guitar pickup holes. These will hold the the black and inner red masks up an away from the paint surface. Cut 8 rectangles 6.3 x 8.5 cm Cut 8 rectangles 6.3 x 2.7 cm Paste the parts together. When dry, fit them into the guitar pickup holes, put some glue onto the upper box edges, wait a few minutes for the glue to dry a little and fix the mask on top at even distance from the guitar borders. Allow enough time for the mask and the boxes to bond together before pulling the boxes out of the wood holes. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 37 Back to Contents These are the inner red and black masks with the pickup boxes attached underneath. Here are the yellow and the outer red masks with the T shape separators. These are the same masks, turned upside down to check the distribution of the separators. This is a close up view of the mask separators. 38 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com The inner red and black masks have to protect the back side of the guitar also. Since there are no pickup holes on the back, I tried gluing tiny pointed legs 1.5 cm tall. As I was expecting, they trapped red dye dust that caused problems on the yellow finish. For that reason, I decided to change these separators to regular pins that worked out fine. Make sure not to use the separators shown here. They trap paint and stain the yellow area with red paint .Change these separators for regular standard pins. This shape was left over from the mask cut outs. I found it could be useful for protecting the front and back sides when painting the guitar laterals. Another left over was the shape shown here. I figured this would also be handy as a hand shield to cover some parts you do not want to get sprayed and for testing spray before firing paint onto the wood. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 39 Wood sanding and stripping (Not on this job) The only real sanding you will be doing on this this guitar will be the F holes. They come painted in black and I preferred them to be the same color as their context. You will have to work this out combining the use of a steel file, Moto-tool drill and sandpaper. You must be extremely careful not to eat away the wood or else you will produce deformations to the beautiful F Holes. Once you finish sanding the black paint off you can retouch the exposed wood with nitrocellulose laquer. Back to Contents 40 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com The finish on this guitar tested not to be nitrocellulose laquer since thinner would not dissolve it. This fact proved to be an advantage since it allowed me to wipe off the paint job several times and start again with no problem. With a clean cloth, wipe off all grease and fingerprints on the guitar finish. Not much sanding is required. You will only need to gently sand the gloss finish on the guitar. For this you can use a 1200 grit sanding paper. “Properly preparing your finish between coats is an important step. With finishes that require building to achieve a thick coat it is extremely important to sand with fine sandpaper between coats to remove bumps and high spots. Wet sanding with special «wet sanding» paper is an excellent way to smooth out the surface without creating lots of airborne dust, which could land, in your next coat of finish. The best advice we can offer is to test your finishing techniques on a piece of scrap wood before you move on to your recently completed masterpiece”. Understanding wood finishing Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 41 Masking tape Back to Contents Cut a piece of cardboard a little bigger than the size of the guitar headstock. Place cardboard over the headstock and press with your hands and fingers over it to make an impression of the headstock contour on the paper. Now you can trace the markings with a pencil. You will need to draw a parallel line next to the border to cut the shape slightly smaller so you can fix this mask with masking tape to the headstock edges. Cut sleek strips of masking tape. This will allow you to work curves easier. You can lightly paste the tape onto a polystyrene (plastic) pad and then with an art knife and a metallic straight edge you can cut the strips. Very carefully mask the black finish borders of your guitar headstock. Finally place the cardboard mask in place and fix it onto the headstock with masking tape. 42 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Cut a cardboard to make a mask for the fret board. Also cut cardboards to protect inner parts of the guitar if you do not want them to get painted. Cut two 5.7 x 20 cm pieces of plain paper to protect the bridge holes. If you let paint into these holes the bridge studs will not fit back in easily. Roll the paper and just stick it into the bridge holes. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 43 Guitar binding masking Back to Contents Gently paste strips of masking tape onto a polystyrene (plastic) pad and then cut narrow strips of tape for masking the curves on the front and back sides of the guitar binding. With very narrow strips of masking tape, mask the front (top) side of the binding. Shown are the most critical curves which I thought would be difficult but the tape went around them quite easily. 44 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com After you finish masking the curved narrow side of the binding you can mask the lateral side which is much easier since it goes around the guitar but with straight edges at all times. You will probably need to hold the guitar on your lap for this procedure. Mask the fret board and stuff the inner part of the guitar with tissue paper if you do not want paint getting inside the body. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 45 Workbench ironwork Headstock cramp angles With a piece of electric wire make a template of the angles you will need to bend your ironwork. These angles will allow a smooth rotation of the guitar when mounted on the “roaster” painting bench. Hold your ironwork firmly with a press and bend the ironwork to meet the angles you desire. Back to Contents Be industrious. Be ingenious. 46 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Headstock cramp holes Make a template of four tuner holes from your guitar headstock. You can take an impression onto a piece of cardboard by simply pressing with your fingers over the holes. Use a nail and a hammer to mark pin points on the plate, where you will drill the holes. Hold the cardboard template into place with tape and mark the the four points with the nail. Drill the four holes into the iron plate. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 47 Fixing the cramp to the guitar headstock Cut a rubber pad to install in between the iron plate and your guitar headstock to protect it from scratches. An old mouse pad can provide you excellent rubber for this purpose. Back to Contents With a sharp point mark the holes on the rubber pad. Drill the four holes into the rubber pad so the screws can pass through easily. Test that all pieces will ensemble together well. 48 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com You will need four screws with their nuts and washers to hold the cramp in place. Shown are the metal cramp, the rubber pad (in place) and the screws ready to be fixed onto the headstock. The cramp is now assembled onto the guitar headstock. You can now screw on the nuts and washers on the back side of the wood. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 49 Mounting the guitar on the work bench (roaster) Back to Contents Proceed to mount the guitar onto the work bench. I found it necessary to install two clamps onto the ironwork disk to balance weights and be able to rotate the guitar on its axis smoothly. 50 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com The work bench allows full rotation both: on the guitars axis (rotate the guitar around) on the base vertical axis (for rotating the board around) You should try to have enough area to walk around the bench anyhow. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 51 Paint plan - Layers Back to Contents Intercalating color layers with laquer layers will allow you to get your job fixed every now and then giving you the possibility to make minor repairs if necessary. Yellow - Remember: too much yellow will produce an orange look. 1 - Laquer 3 - yellow 1 - laquer 2 - yellow 1 - laquer Red - Be sure the concentration is right. Red tends to look gold if poorly concentrated in thinner. 4 - red 1 - laquer 1 - red Black - Be very careful not to spray black onto areas you want as color. 2 - black 1 - laquer 1 - black 52 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Laquer First, carefully take binding masking tape off and check for imperfections. 3 - laquer 1 - sanding check for imperfections 4 - laquer 1 water sanding - 1500 - 2000 grit rub orange skin off 1 plain thinner for gloss finish Let laquer thoroughly dry (for solvent evaporation) several weeks before buffing. Laquer can produce indentations (impressions) on its surface even from cloth texture, cloth wrinkles and fingerprints. The good news is, if exposure to the marking agent was not too prolonged, nitrocelulose laquer will slowly pop up back and return to it´s original flat finish within a few days. Buffing Hand buff - one guitar will be no problem Product used - 3M buffing compound Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 53 First color: yellow dye Painting vertically or at a slant is ok if you are sure you will not soak your paint surface and let paint run down and drip. Don´t Rush Do not soak Keep your distance Beware of dirt and fluff I found I much preferred painting with the guitar in horizontal position. Back to Contents 54 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com The nozzle should pointed perpendicular to the paint surface. The cup on this airbrush can easily be tilted to suit any preferred angle. Yellow was slow drying and after several coats, suddenly, an array of clear, colorless freckles appeared where you could see the bare wood underneath. I was very worried but, investigating, found out that a mixture of yellow dye and half nitrocellulose lacquer could improve the performance. It did but I had to wash everything off with thinner twice and start all over again. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 55 Second color: red dye Back to Contents The neck was easy to paint and quickly reached a beautiful tone with just a few rounds of paint. Regular pins pushed through the grey cardboard helped a lot to solve the mask separation problem. You have to be very careful, though, not to slip the mask and scratch the painted surface. You can see the light coming through between the mask and the guitar. The pins lifted the mask and were invisible to the color dust floating around in each spray. 56 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com The red mask is composed of two parts: The inner mask and the outer mask. This will assure a pure red band and fade away from the mask borders into the yellow and the black. Once the masks were in correct position, measuring from the guitar edges, I marked black guide lines for future repositioning. Masks take off much of the worry from ruining the paint job. With their help, it is quite easy to spray the paint and get the desired results. The mask separators on the edges trapped a little red around their base line in contact with the wood but this was no problem since black covered these spots entirely. Don´t Rush Do not soak Keep your distance Beware of dirt and fluff Working with a shield on your other hand is practical since you get to fire and test your spray before doing it on the art piece. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 57 You must turn the headstock around to paint from this position considering the Casino headstock laterals are not flat but rounded. Back to Contents Painting the front side second is better for you have already experimented with the other side. Wonderful! Everything is running straight. F hole detail. 58 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Checking the transition on the horns. Everything looks neat. Now we are ready to spray the black; tomorrow. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 59 Third color: black dye Back to Contents The black mask still had the cardboard separators. They were also taken off and replaced by pins. Driving a standard pin into this thick, hard grey cardboard is not easy. You have to help yourself with a pair of pliers and, holding the pinpoint short, you push it in little by little. . Ready to spray the black and looking for alternatives to mask the neck. Very important at this stage is to check if all the tape protecting the guitar binding is firmly gripped. Being a pressure sensitive adhesive you should go over the tape with your nails to check for any lift off. If I were to do the job again I would make the mask broader at the neck-body joint. I retouched this picture to explain what I mean. A wider red strip will show the beautiful union between themaple body and the mohanny neck. Also the red from the body swiftly flows onto the neck in a beautiful manner. 60 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Try to temporaily protect the neck from receiving black spray dust. Spray the back side first and repeat the procedure on the front side before proceeding with the lateral sides.. Don´t Rush Do not soak Keep your distance Beware of dirt and fluff Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 61 Painting the guitar sides Cut out, from a white cardboard, the guitar silhouette to protect your work when spraying black over the laterals. Back to Contents I used the system shown here, firing the spray only from the middle of the lateral down to the lower edge and pointing the airbrush at a downward angle. Not taping the mask firmly is not a wise thing to do for spray dust can get under the mask. Today, I would rather tape the whole cardboard mask to the binding masking tape and feel much more safe. Then I turned the guitar around and did the same procedure from the opposite direction as shown in the next page. 62 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com This mask strip with the guitar contour was left over from the black mask. I found it useful for protecting the upper side specially considering that this is an archtop guitar and the white cardboard mask had trouble adapting to the wood curvature. Assemble the two masks together. They will only be briefly sitting on top of the guitar. For extra protection place small portions of tape, holding the masks firmly in place, and stick them onto the binding masking tape. This is a two tempo procedure since you will have to do one section at a time . Fire your spray pointing down at an angle; do not shoot perpendicular to the surface or else balck spray might filter inside the mask and stick onto the guitar red or yellow parts. Also, cover the mask border with a hand held mask for more security. Spraying at an angle will also prevent black paint from falling over the guitar opposite side (underneath). Take your time. Do not rush. Do every part slowly. Stop every now and then. The concave sections are critical and you must be very careful with spray not getting in under the mask. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 63 Painting the neck black stripes I wanted a thin black stripe running along each side of the neck and flowing from the guitar body up to the headstock. For this purpose I used a thick cardboard with a straight edge as a hand held mask. Back to Contents Hold the mask in place and about 1 cm away from the paint surface and spray the black dye along the neck. In seconds you will have a faded black stripe along the neck. The strip thins out and ends at the headstock. The concave surface there makes it a little difficult to work a straight line there so be careful there not to ruin your work as I did a couple of times. Hand held masks have the problem you have to hold them very firmly or else, you risk ruining your work. This is how the strip looks. The picture is from the end of the process. See pictures at the end of the book. 64 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Time for inspection. Not bad for the first time. Only a few things I don’t like: First, some black spray reached over the red part of one of the horns. Although it is almost imperceptible, I wish not to let this pass. Second: I would prefer a wider red gap passing through the neck joint. Third, some small red stains over the yellow area proofed to be impossible to repair. Fourth, The neck also has small defects related to the black strips. You can refer to the trouble shooting section at the end of the book to see find more information about the problems described here. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 65 Examining the dye work This is how the guitar looks after the dyes have all been sprayed. It is time now to check for any imperfections. Do not worry. Many of these can be solved. Back to Contents 66 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com At this point you can spray one or two coats of lacquer to protect the dyes. This will help from spoiling your work by any accident. You will need to stuff tissue paper back in again to prevent lacquer from getting into the guitar interior. You can now begin to unmask the guitar binding. Be very careful and slowly lift the masking tape watching not to peal off the dry paint. BEAUTIFUL ! Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 67 Three Attempts for one desired result Back to Contents If you are a beginner, don´t expect to obtain optimal results easily. First time: The job looked swell but a small part of the red area had been stained with black mist making me feel unconfortable so I decided to scrub off the whole front side and start again. Second time: The black frame became VERY wide; not the look I was wishing for (too gloomy). Conclusion: the error was, I sprayed paint at angles that permitted black to get too much under the floating mask. 68 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Third and last time: New masks were created to obtain more colored surface area and less black. This time the horns were all done in red. The black frame was redisigned to form a wave pattern around the guitar (sometimes slicker, sometimes wider) instead of a single uniform width. Gorgeous ! Please refer to the trouble shooting section to consult problems you may encounter in the process of painting your guitar. Page: 80 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 69 Applying lacquer Back to Contents Adjust your airbrush for a fanlike spray not too small nor too wide. Do not shoot too close or craters will form with waves spreading away like if it were stones thrown into a pond. Let dry for 30 to 60 minutes between layers. Back side - The final layer I give with pure thinner alone. This produces a shinny finish close to mirror but buffing is necessary, anyway, to achieve the ultimate shine. Uncover the headstock and apply two layers of laquer to homogenize the front and side edge finishing. Once you finish spraying nitrocelulose laquer, you must let the guitar sit out and dry for a prudent amount of time. This will allow laquer to slowly dry out. Remember, laquer will feel as totally dry to touch but will stay as a gellatine underneath for a few months after. It is better to let it rest on the work bench where the guitar will not be in contact with anything that can cause pressure on the fresh laquer. I left this guitar rest for one month before proceeding with the buffing step. Front side - last laquer layer. 70 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Sanding lacquer One month later: last inspection. Place the guitar on a table. Orange peel skin is small but present . Orange peel is almost intrinsic to this finish. Here you can appreciate the unsmooth resultant surface do to this phenomena. A piece of cloth is neccesary for wiping the residual water and inspecting the surface. Before buffing, it is necessary to wet sand the surface. Choose a very, very fine grit sand paper to smooth out the orange peel effect and prepare the surface for the buffing step. Folding the sand paper in halves or in fourths permits a greater finger grip. You can unfold the paper and change sides as they wear out. Have a cup with water near for dipping the sand paper in. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 71 Back to Contents Now is the turn for the front side to look shinny and beautiful ! Always experiment with the back side first. Try not to soak the surface too much for water can get into the screw holes and into the guitar interior wetting the dry and unprotected wood inside. 72 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Buffing Once you decide the guitar surface is smooth and ready for buffing , you will need to polish your guitar to a mirror like gloss surface. I used a 3M liquid car polishing compound that worked out perfect for this job. Close up of view. Left half has been buffed. Right has not.. This process is very gratifying since the mirrow shinny surface soon shows up and you feel your work is coming near to completion. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 73 Assemmbling the guitar Back to Contents The final day has come when you will assemble the guitar back again. Protect the guitar surface, at all times, from dents and scratches. Remember the neck pickup goes in first through the bridge pichup hole. Introduce thin electric wires through each hole, as if they were electric fishing tape, and bring one of their ends out through the bridge pickup hole. Attach this front wire end to each of the components and slowly pull them to their position. 74 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Finished work first pictures Eureka ! Mission accomplished. Connection test was ok and the guitar sounds greater than before due to the sexy new look. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 75 76 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Back to Contents Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 77 78 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Back to Contents Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 79 Trouble shooting Back to Contents Repairs, retouching and checking You are not free from trouble. Don’t panic. Repairs are possible but you also have the option of starting all over again. Blank spots in the yellow area Yellow was susceptible to creation of blank specks after a few inmaculate layers. Unbelievable unpainted spots appeared in the yellow coating all of a suddeen. You could see the bare white wood through these spots and more paint would not cover these spots either. Trying to solve this problem got even worse. Finally I had to wash of the yellow coating with a thinner damped cloth and start again. I finally overcame this problem spraying yellow dye solution with half content of laquer solution in each applyed layer. Red paint stain on the yellow area The first time, I made the mistake of using cardboard mask separators instead of thin pins to raise the masks away from the guitar surface. These separators trapped red dye mist and marked the yellow area with red stains. I carefully scrapped the red off with water and 1200 sandpaper. Blowing a very gentle spray with little fluid you can fill empty holes. Later, I change the mask separator system to pins to avoid this type of problem. A very fine paint brush is handy for some retouching. Unfortunately, sometimes trying to repair can make the problem even worse; specially when the sector is not a pure color but the blending of two, like in this case. I tried protecting the sector with some lacquer to start working on the problem. Fortunately, I finally did the whole guitar side again. 80 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com The black stripe termination on the sides of the neck came out almost perfect but not totally. I had to clear the imperfect section with 1200 wet sandpaper, repaint the red and then do the black stripe again. Don´t Rush Do not soak Keep your distance Beware of dirt and fluff By accident I got my fingers, smeared with black dye, printed on the impeccable red I had achieved on the neck. I had to wet sand the stains off and repaint this sector too. Precious time was wasted in these repairs. The problem was I was not going for any less than total satisfaction. At the end, the whole neck was wiped off with thinner and the whole job was redone perfectly. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 81 Retouchinng Alittle retouching can be done without having the mask in place. In this case, red dye is being applied without a mask but being carefull of firing the airbrush at a slant, away from the guitar center and towards the edges. Back to Contents 82 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Binding inspection The guitar binding can gently be scraped with a razor blade and a knife if any paint has filtered under the masking tape. Excesive scrapping can surpass the binding limit and then you will have to remask the binding and retouch with a very fine artist paint brush. When the guitar has passed all checking points, you are ready to apply laquer. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 83 Back to Contents The guitar and neck joint, on the back side, was too dark with black dye. From the beginning, I wanted red to go between the black and flow onto the neck. I decided to wet sand this sector and redo this part. Fortunately, in this sector, red is next to the black so I could repaint the red and then finish with the black fading over it. Fixing this problem, another one rose when I sprayed red on this sector and a golden cast started to glow instead of red. I had no idea what was going on. Today I suppose this was probably due to low concentrated red dye in excesive thinner. I ended repairing this part several times with no success. Finally I had to stop wasting time trying to repair and did the whole back side all over again. I suppose a finner artist airtbrush would have been ideal for this repair job. 84 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com The repair was quite succesful but not enough to reach the desired quality level. Starting over If you are not satisfied, it is quite easy to wipe off the whole job with thinner and start again. I found this much more efficient than wasting time trying to repair defects that grew worse with each action I took. Freerhand retouching the horns without a mask. Designing more artistic black curves with the help of cardbard, black marker and scissors. New masks, last attempt. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 85 Behind the scenes Back to Contents Before and after - Retrospective 86 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 87 Back to Contents Three of my favorites The first guitar, to the left, I built when I was fifteen with a set of instructions from Popular Mechanics Magazine (1970). 88 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com About the author Henry Potdevin is an American bred GermanColombian citizen born in 1955. Architect, painter, photographer, musician, carpenter, and writer. A naturally gifted designer, graduated from architecture in 1980 and served as a Architectural Design Teacher from 1984 to 1999. Since 2002 he has been working in his latest proyect: LePotdevin eBooks: a web site dedicated to the publishing of interactive art books. Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com 89 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst Step by step, the process of turning a natural finish guitar into a beautiful sunburst guitar. Opus Magnum Editions 90 Paint Your Guitar Sunburst - www.lepotdevin.com