Thanks for the video Eric. I have an abalone rosette and binding in my future. Doing a re-top on a 1956 000-18G classical Martin. It has two single black lines that are only .020 wide. I used .5 mm bits to cut them. It was a pucker fest.
I didn't notice until this video that you (at least on the guitar displayed at 2:22) that you use an X bracing on the back of the guitar, as opposed to traditional parallel bracing with a back strip as many guitars have. Is there a specific reason for this? If you have covered this previously then I am unaware.
Enjoyed, watched every minute. Thanks!
A very educational video. Thank you
thank you Eric
Thanks for the video Eric. I have an abalone rosette and binding in my future. Doing a re-top on a 1956 000-18G classical Martin. It has two single black lines that are only .020 wide. I used .5 mm bits to cut them. It was a pucker fest.
I didn't notice until this video that you (at least on the guitar displayed at 2:22) that you use an X bracing on the back of the guitar, as opposed to traditional parallel bracing with a back strip as many guitars have. Is there a specific reason for this? If you have covered this previously then I am unaware.
teflon wont glue ...holly will