The Plectrum - how to make a custom Kirinite guitar pick by hand

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  • Опубликовано: 27 янв 2025
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Комментарии • 289

  • @froggore52
    @froggore52 5 лет назад +96

    Me: Oh he's making a plectrum. No super glue and masking tape trick in this video!
    Ben: Hold my jeweler's saw

  • @michaelmoore7975
    @michaelmoore7975 5 лет назад +31

    I work at a company that makes precision custom CNC thermoplastics and fluoropolymers for energy, cryogenic and petrochemical industries. Materials we use are PEEK, UHMV, Acetal, Delrin, PVC, Torlon, Rulon, Ryton, Tefzel, Phenolic, Nylon, Nylatron. Also virgin, bronze, glass, moly, carbon and graphite TFE.
    I've made guitar picks from most all of these. And I gotta say, Delrin by far makes a fantastic pick; super long lasting, and good sounding. Tonally it's no different than most plastic picks; not too bright or dull. I grind the profile to an extended taper for a slightly flexible tip that won't break but still feels pretty stiff.

    • @harrysaunders6180
      @harrysaunders6180 5 лет назад +2

      Thank you for that tip (no pun intended.) I have some Delrin somewhere. I must dig it out and try it.

    • @A.J.K87
      @A.J.K87 5 лет назад +2

      Doesn't dunlop make it's thickest plectrums out of delrin as well?

    • @michaelmoore7975
      @michaelmoore7975 5 лет назад

      @@A.J.K87 I believe so. About a year ago I made this same comment on the Guitologist channel and someone commented about a company that makes picks from Delrin. Even when I made my 1st pick almost 20 yrs. ago, it was such a good material I figured *somebody* had to have already discovered the same thing. I imagined the 1st Delrin ever created some scientist said, "Hey, I could make a pick outta that." lol

    • @mickdebergerac1143
      @mickdebergerac1143 5 лет назад +1

      " I grind the profile to an extended taper for a slightly flexible tip that won't break but still feels pretty stiff" Oo er steady on mate....LOL

    • @michaelmoore7975
      @michaelmoore7975 5 лет назад

      @@mickdebergerac1143 HAHAHA!! Well, when you read it *that* way.....
      I guess I was subconsciously reminiscing of days gone by...LOL

  • @GySgt_USMC_Ret.
    @GySgt_USMC_Ret. 5 лет назад +2

    Wow! I couldn't have picked a better video to watch with a fresh cup! I've tried many different types of picks, but always come back to a Dunlop Nylon .60mm. Have a great weekend everyone!

    • @CrimsonCustomGuitars
      @CrimsonCustomGuitars  5 лет назад +2

      We always look for a better one but, well.. habits are hard to change! B

  • @jeremiahbeck3292
    @jeremiahbeck3292 5 лет назад +18

    You should make more DIY picks like this from different materials. Then test them out. Super good craftsmanship keep it up

  • @stevetommasi4029
    @stevetommasi4029 5 лет назад +16

    Hi, I'm Steve, the inventor of the pick you like so much and owner of Essetipicks ...
    Congratulations man, you made a nice version of the Easy model ..
    👍😃
    I still do many in a handmade version ..
    The material you used looks a lot like what I use, and which I know is
    rare enough to find .. I use Galalith

    • @sashabagdasarow497
      @sashabagdasarow497 3 года назад

      I just checked your picks and they are way too thick for me. They are also pretty expensive, why that price?

  • @TheStupidMonkey007
    @TheStupidMonkey007 5 лет назад +2

    Everytime I get a new notification and see what new video you have made, I am amazed at not only the ideas, but your dexterity (except for dropping the pick (lol)). The cuts and shaping you do free hand is incredible! Keep up all the great videos and content.All the best to you and your team Ben.

  • @zeolite2
    @zeolite2 5 лет назад +59

    New work holding "foolproof" method. Superglue it to your fingers!

    • @kmcclinton71
      @kmcclinton71 5 лет назад +2

      superglue and masking tape... "leaves less residue"

  • @distantsunrising
    @distantsunrising 2 года назад

    You are BRILLIANT✨ Sir.!!! I really enjoyed Your Episode. Stor Suksuss Grand Success to Ye Mó Chridhe🌅 Love from Texas

  • @jojjeja9371
    @jojjeja9371 3 года назад

    Love this guy, funny and kind.

  • @cx019
    @cx019 4 года назад

    i make plectrums myself as a hobby. so far i used acrylic and makrolon. putting masking tape on the material to draw the shape on helps a lot. then i saw out the rough shape with a bandsaw and shape the plectrum with a disc sander to taste. after shaping i use 400 grit sandpaper to soften the edges. most of the time i skip polishing, because i like the matte look. my favourite plecs have between 6 and 8 mm. first i mimicked the gravity picks, but invented shapes for myself. :)

  • @emersonvieira2533
    @emersonvieira2533 5 лет назад +2

    Exactly like a prescious jewel!!!Give to me to my birthday present please???hahaha.. Great job man and,congrats from Brazil!!

  • @azulchamoy
    @azulchamoy 4 года назад +29

    damn i didn’t know skurge from thor ragnorok made guitars

    • @fatherstalin1727
      @fatherstalin1727 4 года назад

      I was thinking the same thing

    • @quima5844
      @quima5844 4 года назад

      How else did he afford his stuff

  • @troublingleaf
    @troublingleaf 5 лет назад +2

    That's cool, I might have to try it. Pick gauges an on and off thing with me, I go through phases where I'll only use really chunky picks, but then a few months later I'll lose it and start playing with a .88 or 1mm and they feel so much better for a while until inevitably I get bored and want a good manly pick again!

  • @JbfMusicGuitar
    @JbfMusicGuitar 5 лет назад +2

    Amazing craftsmanship, as always. Can't deny the temptation to make (some likely horrendously awful) diy picks!

  • @JuishHHIT
    @JuishHHIT 5 лет назад

    It’s always exciting to see a counter pop up in the corner, great visual foreshadow for future fun to ensue.

  • @DragonofLimerick
    @DragonofLimerick 5 лет назад

    Very cool! It has probably been 45 years since I made a plectrum for myself!!

  • @bobby9727
    @bobby9727 5 лет назад

    Take a shot everytime Ben drops the pick Lol.Very cool Ben,even your picks are a work of Art.

  • @shoetree
    @shoetree 5 лет назад

    I carved out a mold in rubber, in the lab where I worked, and used left over epoxy resin from processing biopsies to make my own plectrums. They sound and feel great, but are pretty brittle so you have to make them pretty thick, which I prefer anyway.

    • @EricMLopez
      @EricMLopez 4 года назад

      Try polyester resin. It's better for picks than epoxy resins

  • @dalebodmer
    @dalebodmer 5 лет назад

    Always a time watching what you are up to, ben.
    Phil McKnight gave you some great recommendations on his live Q&A broadcast yesterday!

  • @rikfroschauer1743
    @rikfroschauer1743 4 года назад

    I used to make mine outta different wood veneers, a hole in the center for grip and for different thickness I would glue 2 or 3 plys together

  • @keesketsers5866
    @keesketsers5866 5 лет назад

    I can just see it : Ben playing a John Mayer PRS on the PRS stand and saying "Man, I looooooove this..........plectrum".
    Would have loved to see the PRS guy's face at that moment hahaha!

  • @retrovirusjet6244
    @retrovirusjet6244 4 года назад

    Hi Ben, i made make plectrum too, how i laugh when i see you dropping the thing.... it happend to me a thounsan times. My current record is a 20 m launch ! when polishing the pick..... :D. Very very good channel by the way.

  • @jimbullock4833
    @jimbullock4833 5 лет назад +1

    I have sheets of that exact same material!!! No way haha. Made myself a few chonky 7mm ones a year ago but after watching this I'm gna have have a go at some different designs 😁
    Made mine with a dremel to get the base shape and a pack of the multi sided nail files from b&m to bevel it down then sanded and polished it smooth using wet sanding 😁 super fun way to kill some time on a weekend.

    • @modergav
      @modergav 5 лет назад

      What is this material? Celuloid?

  • @zrxdoug
    @zrxdoug 5 лет назад

    Try delrin..stuff wears forever and works pretty easily.
    Not as pretty though..
    😁
    I do the central "divot" by drilling a pilot hole and following that with a depth-stopped countersink bit.
    The thru-hole makes polishing on a full size wheel a lot easier..you can pass a bit of shoelace thru to make a holder/lanyard to keep from launching the pick into low earth orbit

  • @fordcomets
    @fordcomets 5 лет назад +2

    It looks beautiful, I'd love to see it used in an inlay, but wonder how well it would hold up

  • @seanbarker6478
    @seanbarker6478 5 лет назад

    I made one out of coconut shell a few years ago, the natural curve gave a nice thumb grip. Very deep and woody sounding though!

  • @bluzshadez
    @bluzshadez 4 года назад +1

    Dude, You are awesome! I can only make plectrums from Credit Cards using a PICK PUNCH. LOL!

  • @joebikeguy6669
    @joebikeguy6669 5 лет назад

    Jazz guitarists are quite fond of the thick pick. They believe, and I think it is true, that it produces a fuller "jazzier" tone. I think the material it is made from also is part of the produced/perceived tone. Cheers!

  • @peterfredrickmeyer
    @peterfredrickmeyer 5 лет назад +5

    Hey Ben i have using deer antler for my pick material and loving it !! ps. No deer were harmed,, found antler in the woods

    • @TheAlanSaunders
      @TheAlanSaunders 5 лет назад +2

      I used to live in the middle of a forest/woods in southern England with many Roe and Fallow deer but in twenty years of daily walks I was disappointed never to find shed antlers. The deer came right up to the house and decimated our apple trees and beech hedge. I had a plan to make a 'one way fence' so they would be trapped in our two thirds of an acre - I like venison!
      I wonder if antler would make a good nut or acoustic saddle?

    • @nicktubby3768
      @nicktubby3768 5 лет назад

      Alan Saunders - definitely make good nuts

    • @Southernguitar74
      @Southernguitar74 4 года назад

      I never thought about antler. I have boxes full of them, literally, from years of collecting. I use antler for many things. Now I will be making an antler pick...Perhaps many of them! Thanks

  • @joepolygraph
    @joepolygraph 5 лет назад

    Get yourself a 3d printer, and you can make picks with the Crimson logo in the middle. Recessed textured groves and all.
    Best part, once you get the design down, you can program the printer to make about 25 at a time, and in various gauges

  • @x9x9x9x9x9
    @x9x9x9x9x9 5 лет назад +1

    You do enough hand work with the dremel I think you'd benefit from a flex shaft grinder. You get more speed and power than a dremel and in a lighter hand piece. I have heard mixed things about foredom flex shaft grinders but haven't used one. I have one of the cheap chinese ones (bought from harbor freight in the Us) and it works great. I have multiple hand pieces that I swap out for changing bits quickly between cutting, sanding/wire brushing, and polishing. The only down side to the cheap one is needing a chuck key to change bits but that can be fixed easily. It was just cheaper for me at the time to buy replacement hand pieces for $8 each.

  • @RetroPlus
    @RetroPlus 5 лет назад

    That looks beautiful, i love the look of that material.

  • @themicdfiles1865
    @themicdfiles1865 3 года назад

    I make my own picks with hardwood fall down from my shop. I lay the wood down in a way that leaves the hardwood as the top of the pick, then pour epoxy over the entire mold. Using a caliper and my bench grinder I take them to different thickness, and they are amazing tools. I also have acquired a tile saw and I’ve found piles of dinosaur bone, so that is my next project. I’d trade you a couple of your picks for a couple of mine. Your guitars are insane, btw! You do some incredible work!

  • @TwistedStrummer
    @TwistedStrummer 4 года назад

    Gorgeous

  • @gregmartin1757
    @gregmartin1757 5 лет назад

    Nice pick or plectrum as you call em in the uk. Seems like a great deal of work for something you can buy very inexpensively but i suppose it is still a worthy endeavor to experience the satisfaction of crafting one yourself.

  • @0nLyCh4oS
    @0nLyCh4oS 4 года назад

    For me the equivalent to the superglue-masking tape trick for irregular shapes is hot glue and using alcohol for removal (not as easy as with masking tape, but you can peel it off in one piece after soaking it in alcohol)

  • @El_Croc
    @El_Croc 5 лет назад

    Kirinite, learned something Thanks. Tip: Try holding the rasp/file upside down and moving the workpiece instead when shaping small objects.

  • @robertsparkman8516
    @robertsparkman8516 5 лет назад +2

    Good choice going for the Dremel, if you had used the bench grinder pick drop three would have delivered it to me in Ohio.

  • @jaydenstramel562
    @jaydenstramel562 5 лет назад +1

    Rob Scallon uses giant picks from Purple Plectrums, this one almost looks normal in size compared to those

  • @tomparnell4718
    @tomparnell4718 5 лет назад +1

    You need bigger balls! 😁 had a similar problem on a different project and used a bigger abrasive ball. Came out very neat. Great work as always!

  • @Ochatach
    @Ochatach 5 лет назад

    Looks very similar in material to the 60 year anniversary plektrums from Fender released back in 2006, still got some of those and they're beatiful but bought too heavy ones for my usual playstyle

  • @parttroll1
    @parttroll1 5 лет назад +1

    Sure beats my picks punched out from a loyalty card!

  • @creamore
    @creamore 5 лет назад +1

    1:56 gives a whole new meaning to hand sanding...

  • @glennwhitlock1272
    @glennwhitlock1272 5 лет назад

    oOo. I want one, please, Ben. I only use Gravity picks and some of them have the rough beveled edges, which is nice for a crisp sound. Nice demo, btw. Would also like a lock-in one weekend so that I could play all those guitars on the office wall.

  • @Puerto_Rico_Law21
    @Puerto_Rico_Law21 5 лет назад

    Bass plectrum. Looks heavy. Nice job.

  • @Markknightexeter
    @Markknightexeter 4 года назад

    I can see quite a few strings snapping from this beast

  • @zarancorde
    @zarancorde 5 лет назад

    I wonder if it would work as an interesting fret board inlay material... the colors I have found for Kirinite are amazing

    • @EricMLopez
      @EricMLopez 4 года назад +1

      It's somewhat more durable than wood, so it would work well for fretboard inlays

  • @scottr.hampton2474
    @scottr.hampton2474 5 лет назад

    Ben! Can light pass through Kirinite? Crazy idea about lit inlays. Yes, I have no idea why I'm so hooked on... lights. I'm looking for someone to tell me if I can hook a small Aduino board to pick ups, then use the signals to light different LED inlets in the body, maybe also the neck of a guitar! Brain cells on overload!

    • @EricMLopez
      @EricMLopez 4 года назад

      You can somewhat see through most colors if the material is sufficiently thin, but for these types of thicknesses, a regular LED wouldn't penetrate very well

  • @mykhough6614
    @mykhough6614 5 лет назад +15

    Me: Nothing from Crimson today. I'll get on with making some picks.
    Computer: Ping!!!
    Spooky or what? I picked up some off-cuts of Keruing yesterday from a reclamation site and one piece just cried out to be made into picks. My method is slightly different. I sand the wood first then cut out the shapes. I have a home-made hand vice to hold the picks while I bevel and smooth the edges with various sanding sticks. I've given myself too many accidental manicures holding the picks in my fingers and I am much less likely to drop them! I'm going to finish some of them with Crimson Finishing Oil and some with Melamine lacquer. Another coincidence is that I've just bought some skip-tooth blades for my jeweller's saw (from The Vintage Toolshop) and I'm loving them.

  • @charlesharper7292
    @charlesharper7292 5 лет назад

    Very nice! Very thick.
    Probably three times as thick as my heavy store bought generic picks...

  • @paulhcan
    @paulhcan 5 лет назад

    Maybe use the material for Truss Rod covers.

  • @DavidGlendinning
    @DavidGlendinning 5 лет назад

    Nice work! This colour would be cool for some inlay work (the Crimson logo, perhaps?) or a (really thick) pickguard.

  • @wanderingcalamity360
    @wanderingcalamity360 5 лет назад

    That's pretty awesome.
    Doing that it off stabilized wood or bone ought to be interesting.

  • @Mizai
    @Mizai 4 года назад +1

    Thats a nice pick

  • @bertrandmajorik6589
    @bertrandmajorik6589 4 года назад

    DAMM YOU !!! not even started the video, i'm shopping for some Kirinite, WRRRRAAAAHHHHH........

  • @piemmetubo
    @piemmetubo 5 лет назад

    Great video. Thanks!
    Personally I prefer picks of wood, that I make by myself. My favorite woods are oak, olive, mahogany and durmast.

  • @Keith_KC8TCQ
    @Keith_KC8TCQ 5 лет назад +1

    Saturday drinking game, every time Ben drops the plectrum, drink an Irish Cofffee

    • @CrimsonCustomGuitars
      @CrimsonCustomGuitars  5 лет назад +1

      Atleast there's coffee!

    • @Keith_KC8TCQ
      @Keith_KC8TCQ 5 лет назад

      @@CrimsonCustomGuitars well of course there is coffee. What do you take me for?

  • @michaelogden5958
    @michaelogden5958 5 лет назад

    I've never played with a pick (plectrum) that thick. However, to each his/her own! Cheers!

    • @MrAlexandreRocha
      @MrAlexandreRocha 5 лет назад

      Thick picks like this one sound great on bass and work really well with jazz players and even sweep picking players, like Frank Gambale

  • @camerontgore
    @camerontgore 5 лет назад +1

    Up vote for the slow-mo drop cut!

  • @vk2ktm
    @vk2ktm 5 лет назад

    what would it do to feel and playability if you deepened the detent - until it made a small hole in the middle?

  • @Forest_Fifer
    @Forest_Fifer 5 лет назад +1

    4:22 - Teeth. On. Edge.
    Dropped plectrum counter - genius

  • @Robert-ww7gz
    @Robert-ww7gz Год назад

    A purple heart or black palm pick would be nice.

  • @Rooonga
    @Rooonga 5 лет назад +3

    Hey Ben. I think you should use the superglue and finger trick on plectrums. Maybe you’ll drop them less 😂

  • @tomheynemann8768
    @tomheynemann8768 5 лет назад +2

    No custom 6 hour super-elaborate custom plectrum build? Who are you and what have you done with Ben?

  • @zrxdoug
    @zrxdoug 5 лет назад +4

    You've inspired me to create a plectrum which enables me to play a whole song without dropping it..
    My only question is, should the superglue go on the thumb, the forefinger, or both?
    😂

    • @jonpomerance-trifts6113
      @jonpomerance-trifts6113 5 лет назад +2

      Doesn't matter, but if you want to play fast, don't forget the accelerator! ;)

    • @bkbinj6320
      @bkbinj6320 5 лет назад +1

      Superglue on forefinger, accelerator on thumb

  • @arriereitor
    @arriereitor 5 лет назад

    I love your T shirt, It's awewsome

  • @DidierSampaolo
    @DidierSampaolo 5 лет назад

    Yeah, the masking tape and superglue trick! :D

  • @albertodalmaso8896
    @albertodalmaso8896 5 лет назад

    Hey Ben can i ask you how to repair fret slot that are cut too Wide from the factory ? I've bought 2 SX brand strat. With maple neck and rosewood fingerboard and in both there is almost 75% of the fret pulling out from the slot After 2 month seating on a "Proel" stand and normal playing

  • @danielswine536
    @danielswine536 5 лет назад

    Picks!?! We wanna see the 2020 custom case build! BTW my mum (73) thought the Crimson Guitars Tshirt I have is cool. My love of metal not so much...

  • @rogerj412
    @rogerj412 5 лет назад

    Should try working with some micarta.

  • @polymorphism1966
    @polymorphism1966 5 лет назад

    Love it!

  • @pavannippani7680
    @pavannippani7680 3 года назад

    this is the first time i heard him play a guitar...... and he is good....what do ya know...

  • @HerrRabe_zaubert
    @HerrRabe_zaubert 5 лет назад

    Looks great. Is there anywhere tamplats for plactrums?

  • @JayEdom
    @JayEdom 2 месяца назад

    I’m slowly shaping my soap stone into a useable pick with a coarse file first such a strong rock

  • @kerodanalduin3719
    @kerodanalduin3719 5 лет назад

    So, what do YOU plan to do with that blood centrifuge?

  • @peterlinley6520
    @peterlinley6520 5 лет назад

    Back in my youth/ broke student days I used old bank cards. You could get three or four Pics out of an old card. Bit too soft but they did the job.

  • @yetimatzenightcat8702
    @yetimatzenightcat8702 5 лет назад

    This pick looks beautiful
    I never thought that you can do these yourself :--)
    My picks always make such a curve.
    If they are new i always have to play the outline on them, then they are great for a while and then they get worse again. Then i cut them with a scissor and everything starts again until almost nothing is left. If the pleck is very thick, it will take a very long time to get the right shape. I would need softer ot thinner material.If i were a pleck producer, people could send me their favorite used pick. Then you could scan the contour at the edge with laser and than you can make with this data new plecks. So every customer would get an optimal new pleck
    Sorry for my ornitology

  • @WibblyWobblyBob
    @WibblyWobblyBob 5 лет назад +2

    What's kirinite precious?

  • @toppertruthio
    @toppertruthio 5 лет назад +2

    This video made me imagine you making a guitar out of layers of denim,and epoxy resin..........Cmon bad boy.....you can do it

  • @billkaroly
    @billkaroly 5 лет назад +2

    It's like you're back in the Stone age making Flint arrowheads.

    • @JasonTAho
      @JasonTAho 5 лет назад +1

      With a Dremel and files and such? I bet the cavemen would have loved a Dremel

    • @mortwally3510
      @mortwally3510 5 лет назад +1

      Nothing wrong with that I hunt Whitetail deer with a long bowl and flint arrowheads🎸🎼😎🍺🦌🇺🇸🇱🇹

    • @billkaroly
      @billkaroly 5 лет назад

      I think making a guitar pick is super of like making Flint arrowheads. Both are cool. One is easier.

  • @ianthomson9363
    @ianthomson9363 5 лет назад

    I've never been able to play with a plectrum, it always just feels wrong. Instead, I use my index finger nail, or for playing bass, a thumbpick. However, I do feel the urge to make plectra now.

  • @J__C__
    @J__C__ 5 лет назад

    Are stiff picks better than floppy ones? Someone recommended that I use a floppy/bendable pick as a beginner. Why is that? And why would one want such a thick pick(plectrum)?

  • @Burnningsoul
    @Burnningsoul 5 лет назад

    always wondered if Nylatron would make a good pic material. Nylon with moly in it. It's grey with dark swirls in it. Pretty wear resistant, machines fine. Use to make a lot of parts from it not too expensive or SP-21 vespel which is a pretty black. tough has graphite in it. and it is expensive but can be machined also. I'd love to see how SP-21 holds up as a pick or nylatron. One thing about the vespel pics is you wouldn't be tossing them into the audience 1 inch dia by 6 inches long rod is about 997 dollars.

    • @EricMLopez
      @EricMLopez 4 года назад

      I've never tried SP-21, but SP-1 holds up very well (second most durable material I've made picks from) and is in fact what Blue Chip Picks uses

    • @Burnningsoul
      @Burnningsoul 4 года назад

      @@EricMLopez Sp 21 is black instead of tan (brown) vespel it is low friction has graphite in it. PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS:
      Low wear at high bearing PV's
      Low coefficient of friction
      Long-term thermal stability
      High stiffness
      Low elongation
      Outstanding performance with or without lubrication
      Good strength and impact resistance
      from its data sheet. It is as expensive also.

    • @EricMLopez
      @EricMLopez 4 года назад

      @@Burnningsoul Yeah I've checked it out online, but the insanely high price of Vespel has kept me from trying out SP-21 haha

    • @Burnningsoul
      @Burnningsoul 4 года назад +1

      @@EricMLopez yea I use to work as a machinist and some of the items we made where made out of vespel. The sp21 were used for parts that needed not to bind on other pieces. The part would go down into the ground and vespel keeps its shape better than most other polymers and plastics in places subjected to higher temperatures. We used other stuff also but non of it good for guitar pics =)

  • @chrisjs6123
    @chrisjs6123 5 лет назад

    I use Wegen picks. Hand made but no idea what from. They sound good, last forever and force you into using better technique.
    Having watched you make this one i understand why the Wegen picks are so expensive.

  • @daisysophia1748
    @daisysophia1748 4 года назад +3

    I want to quit my job and just learn how to use everything in that workshop 😂

  • @BrunodeSouzaLino
    @BrunodeSouzaLino 5 лет назад

    But why did you make a Dunlop Big Stubby?

  • @Danger_Noodle_Pliskin
    @Danger_Noodle_Pliskin 5 лет назад +2

    I see old tool racks in the background, holding this one back?

    • @ultraorange1
      @ultraorange1 5 лет назад +2

      Yup I’m guessing the shop reorganization means They are drawing on some back up videos. I hope Ben gets on with it because I wanted to see him make a case.

  • @StoneShards
    @StoneShards 5 лет назад

    ...at the very bottom of all my todo lists...hehehe

  • @josephvalo
    @josephvalo 5 лет назад

    It would be awesome if you made a guitar from that material! Awesome video!

  • @TheScubaboy56
    @TheScubaboy56 5 лет назад

    Back on the Planet Ocean !

  • @danlupinacci4777
    @danlupinacci4777 4 года назад

    what crimson model guitar is this at end video and is it avail to be made lefthanded.. beauitful guitar

  • @RisiRajGuha
    @RisiRajGuha 5 лет назад +1

    looks line Skurge did survive Ragnarok, now he is into guitar now.

    • @J__C__
      @J__C__ 5 лет назад

      The ragnarok references are really getting old at this point 👎

    • @RisiRajGuha
      @RisiRajGuha 5 лет назад

      @@J__C__ 😜 i thought i was the only one notices any resemblance.

  • @benfowler2127
    @benfowler2127 5 лет назад +1

    I’m curious how durable this would be for a fretboard inlay project

    • @EricMLopez
      @EricMLopez 4 года назад +1

      I work with this material on a regular basis. It would be more durable than the fretboard wood surrounding it, so there's no concern there

  • @isaacalexander3103
    @isaacalexander3103 4 года назад

    im just curious, but about how much kirinte would it take to make custom inlays for a guitar? and approximately how much would that cost me

  • @stuartgrier5605
    @stuartgrier5605 4 года назад

    Nice pick, but I also use white sharkfins, I have never liked thicker picks, i don't know why. As I am not fully convinced, can you make me one and i will give you my honest, unbiased, opinion.
    Cheers

  • @wolflahti412
    @wolflahti412 5 лет назад

    I've been known to use a matchbook cover for a guitar pick.

  • @seanschocke6910
    @seanschocke6910 5 лет назад

    I want to know what song is playing!! I love that tune. Please tell me if you can

  • @Synard66
    @Synard66 5 лет назад

    Wow sure did have to PICK that up a lot.

  • @tomholton235
    @tomholton235 5 лет назад

    I have a feeling he was hoping you would fall in love with the guitar he was selling 😂 I’ll have to check out some new pick shapes, not sure if jazz 3s are actually the best for me or I’m just used to them

    • @BrunodeSouzaLino
      @BrunodeSouzaLino 5 лет назад

      There are multiple types of Jazz III. The black ones are grippier and flex less. The Ultex ones are very hard. My favorites are the Tortex Pitch Black ones. They are not as hard as the red ones, but they feel better for me. There's also the Planet Waves Black Ice, which is similar to the Pitch Black, but slightly larger.

  • @stevelouth7011
    @stevelouth7011 5 лет назад

    Cool Beanzzzzzz 🎸🎸🎸😁