When you start a new business you need to set yourself apart from your competition
and that's what I attempted to do when I began designing our line of basses.
And I've learned a lot. The graphic on the headstock was a way of trademarking our
basses. Many people love the idea, many don't. It's a personal opinion thing. I'm
building a bass now for a customer that loved the idea so much that we're putting his own
designs on the headstock and the pickguard.
However, moving forward we'll be using this as our standard namesake:
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The graphics will be offered only as a free option. I just didn't want to be doing what
everybody else was doing - it's as simple as that. Same goes for the graphite necks.
I happen to love graphite necks and these necks were painstakingly built for us.
So, what I believed to be stunningly beautiful fell by the wayside. Which is the reason
that you've noticed that I'm selling them.
Luckily I have a neck builder that can build anything - our five-piece and maple necks
seem to be much more popular. Moving forward we'll probably build more traditional basses
and not on spec - only custom basses.
And a word about using the tele pickguard instead of the chrome control cover found
on '51 p's - it's easier to find a needle in a haystack than finding lefty chrome '51
p-bass control covers so it was more of a design solution to a problem. Sure, I could go down
to a machine shop and have them made but I just can't see spending the money - especially
when I wanted to "be different" anyway. The point wasn't to make a replica '51 p bass.
So, thank you to EVERYBODY for your comments, good, bad, critical and positive. Without
them we'd be unable to adjust our business plan and move on.
Pete