Building a Custom Electric Bass from SCRATCH
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
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Xyla Foxlin
3727 W. Magnolia Blvd. # 174
Burbank, CA 91505
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Build your own Bass Guitar:
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Bill of Materials from StewMac: affiliate links
The Neck:
1x Ebony 3" Wide Fingerboard for Bass stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Slotted Fingerboard for Fender Bass stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Bass Neck Blank stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Spoke Nut Hot Rod Truss Rod (24.5") stewmac.sjv.io...
2x 0.200" x 0.250" x 24" Carbon Fiber Rods stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Router Bit for Hot Rod Truss Rods stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Gauged Nut Files for Bass stewmac.sjv.io...
2x Fender Nut Blank stewmac.sjv.io...
2x Pre Cut Fret Wire (Medium/Medium) stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Deadblow Fretting Hammer stewmac.sjv.io...
1x White side dot material stewmac.sjv.io...
20x 4mm pearl dots www.stewmac.co...
1x Fret Cutters stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Fret End Dressing File stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Refret Saw and Fret Slot Cleaning Tool Set stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Fret Leveler 6" stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Compact Z File (300) stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Fret Rocker stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Notched straight edge for basses stewmac.sjv.io...
1x 24" Straight Edge stewmac.sjv.io...
1x 16" Aluminum Sanding Beam stewmac.sjv.io...
1x 3M Stikit Gold Abrasives Woodworker Set of 3, 2-3/4" Roll stewmac.sjv.io...
1x 3M Stikit Gold Abrasives Fret and Finishing Set of 4, 2-3/4" Roll stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Nut & Saddle vise stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Nut & Saddle Shaping File Sets stewmac.sjv.io...
1x String Spacing Rule stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Feeler Gauges stewmac.sjv.io...
4x Gotoh Compact Bass Tuners - Left - Chrome stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Roller String Retainer for Bass stewmac.sjv.io...
The Body:
1x Golden Age Pickups for Jazz Bass, Set of 2 stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Premium Wiring Kit for J-bass stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Hipshot 4-string KickAss Bass Bridge stewmac.sjv.io/9W3o64
1x Bass String Ferrules stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Neck Routing Pocket Template for Fender stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Electro Socket Jack Mount (Chrome) stewmac.sjv.io...
1x Flush Trim Bit 1" stewmac.sjv.io...
1x 7/16" Roundover Bit stewmac.sjv.io...
Huge thank-you to TotalBoat for supporting my channel!
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ICYMI: I have a second channel called Xyla Foxlin Offcuts now! Here's the link to the video on the steambox: ruclips.net/video/55eIkfR0UYY/видео.html
Also, the forms and templates are on ebay: www.ebay.com/itm/265803027479
so youtube did a thing and sent me here. im glad i watched...no matter what haters say, good on you for trying something so crazy...you get a sub from me
quick note on shellac it isnt the insect excrement its there exoskeletons. if memory serves its the lac betel bodies and solvent base . you should look into french polishing if you think sanding takes time lol. thanks for the video
Wonderful video absolutely inspiring!!!🤗
Are you selling the bass you made?
badass bass!
Offcuts… is genious
Make sure you protect the Purple heartwood with a UV blocking finish, UV light will cause it to lose its purple hue and fade to dark brown over time
Man, good call!
Otherwise in wont be Deep Purple anymore heh heh heh
I wasn't aware that UV is the culprit but the brown that mine turned is not in any way special so avoiding it is definitely worth trying.
That wood is cursed.. But beautiful.
It's starts off as Deep Purple but later in life it's better for playing Brown notes.
The sneaky cut at 33:40 switching from Xyla to Nick was pretty well done... I had to rewatch that section to see how I missed it.
That cut was smoother than the bass playing.
That was awesome. I was like “What? SHe gOt Gud!”.
That she built a bass, having never even held one before, is incredible. It’s not perfect, but it looks like it wouldn’t take much tuning to make much better.
just FYI, purpleheart is oily, it gets everywhere, it turns your snot purple, dulls your blades, breaks your bits, tears out worse than a gross crusty scab, and smells like farts...
But also, a spiral template bit (the larger the diameter the better) will help a lot with that tearout
It will also cause you to break out in hives if you're susceptible.
Tzlam isn't fun either.
Purpleheart smells less like farts than rosewood, IMO
@@nilsniemeier5345 YUP. Learned that one the hard way.
Yes. All that above.
And I've heard the dust can be hazardous (poisonous). So. If it turns your snot purple, you're doing it wrong.
Don't permanently injure yourself for your craft.
(nice work, by the way)
I came to this channel because I'm learning how to build guitars, and you ended up inspiring my 7 year old daughter to want to be an engineer! Thank you and keep on creating! "She's really cool when she's wearing her safety glasses" - quote from my kid. 😀
Wonderful! 🌺
Engineering is an amazing trade as you can make anything you can dream up.
As someone who sands guitar and bass necks everyday for one of the biggest guitar companies... I am beyond impressed with the skill and attention to detail you put into making this beautiful instrument, especially the neck. Shaping the neck is definitely no easy feat, yet you made it look like a cakewalk. Well done
She is kind of 'gifted' imo. I love her humour
I've had a piece of brazilian wallnut sitting in my workshop for many years, waiting for me to build a bass. I think it's time, you've inspired me. Yours is so amazing ! Love it.
A Brazilian walnut, eh? What is her name? 🙃
I can't believe you got Nick to play your bass! What an honor to have a legend use something you created!
He KILLED IT
Oh NO! ...are you making a new one then?
On a serious note, it would be very interesting to see a pro luthier comment and do a light review on your build. Congrats, beautiful instrument!
BTW, drop D tuning + distortion pedal = zen powers
(All hail BONG (UK), especially "Mana-Yood Sushai" and "Thought and Existence". But also Sunn o)))'s low end bliss).
@@xylafoxlin but YOU also killed it by creating such a master piece!
Like you don't realize what a real renaissance woman Xyla is until she's shredding that thing. Canoe builder, Musician, Pilot, Woodworker, Maker, Rocket Scientist. Holy crap.
It's really cool seeing someone take on all manner of challenges. Sweet bass!
She has mastered the element of wood. She can do anything with her woodbending powers.
I was thinking the very same.
Can’t believe you had Nick test playing your homemade bass! Legend!
And this build should have been entered into the Great Guitar Build Off that Crimson Guitars are hosting right now 😄
I checked out this video because I really enjoy bass guitar, and the end product is just so eye-catching. 36 minutes later and...I am so blown away by all the thought, time and talent you put into this project! Just an incredibly beautiful work of art, but I can see how maybe you don't want to dwell on the challenges posed by the purple heartwood. Anyway, I'm totally going to back you on Patreon just so I can see more of your work. Thanks!
Luthier here! I've made the same mistake with cutting into templates like you did on the neck pocket. I highly recommend using a fixed base for your router rather than a plunge base. when going to a new depth it's a little stressful as you have to walk it in, however it takes away a great amount of risk of cutting where you don't want because the bearing is always below the base. (or somehow set an upper stopper on the plunge base so the bearing doesn't retract higher than the baseplate)
also having built a good handful of guitars now.... it's all sanding. it's 99% sanding. and then when you think you're done sanding, you sand more.
I don't think I've ever been so impressed by a woodworking video. You have some real pro-level skills there, Xyla.
The jeans leg soft-jaw on the neck is one of my favorite tricks I've seen, and the final result is incredible!
Is that.... a Joft Jaw?
@@xylafoxlin Le-vice?
I think that this is the first time that I've not fastforwarded through a musical instrument luthier's video. A wonderful balance of patience, skill, and quirky humour made this a joy to watch and to listen to. 🌺
Coming from someone with 40 plus yrs working with all things wood AND 45 yrs playing guitar, I've seen it all but Xyla you are simply amazing! This is only my 2nd video from you and you've already not only built but designed a teardrop camper and a really cool unique bass guitar! So, wow what an introduction into your world! I've noticed you say many of these tasks are your 1st time doing which makes it even more amazing! To say I'm impressed is a massive understatement! I was initially concerned about the resonance of the bass but I see you've attached the ash to the purple heart in enough places to alleviate my concerns and I've never seen the type truss rod you have as mine are adjusted on the headstock and you adjust at a 90° angle. Interesting! Anyway, you are so proficient at so many things I am blown away. Also you present your videos with such an engaging manner! Especially the humor you inject so seamlessly! And like you, i spent most of my 20's sanding. Lol. Thank you for making these videos because I was having trouble finding anything to keep my interest and I can't begin to describe how inspiring you are! You most definitely have a new subscriber here and I am definitely spreading the word!
Wow, I can't believe I'm this late with a new Xyla project. I was thinking that something was overdue but after watching this video, I'm totally blown away. Is there nothing that this woman can't do? I can't do a fraction of the stuff she's ever achieved or done, but this one is one of the best, which is hard. All her stuff is fantastic. Her imagination is fertile and rich in not just imagining but also implementing. Watching the intricacies of building this electric bass from scratch, the tiny details, and the amount of work, as she mentions on the sanding, taping and fine points, I'm impressed. True craftswoman in every bit of work and she's so calm and patient. I'd be pulling my hair getting frustrated at little setbacks. Then she completes it, and it sounds as great as she models and plays it. Truly, impressive work. I hope the receiver appreciates a Xyla design as its always one of a kind and piece of art & function.
Great job Xyla, as usual!! I love your channel, always great enthusiasm!! I'm almost 70 now, still making and building, teaching, and my whole career has been building prototypes and 1 off projects as a T&D maker, model maker, electronics technician a personal maker and an Amateur radio operator and I long ago lost track of the hours I've spent sanding, polishing, fitting building, testing etc!!! I started in shop class in 7th grade and never looked back. It's been a hell of great ride too!!!
Beginning to post shorts is a wonderful idea. I might not have sought out this video without it and I'm so glad I did. What a beautiful and amazing instrument you created. You have the imagination of a dreamer, the vision of an engineer and the skill set of an artist. You are an amazingly gifted, and entertaining, young women.
I am a bass player. When I was starting out when I was like 15 or so, I built a bass guitar from leftover parts of broken guitars. I had a starburst body of a Stratocaster copy and a 4-string bass neck. I worked those two pieces until they fit together, then started applying the hardware that I harvested from many other old guitars. The BEST part of this bass was the DiMarzio Super Distortion guitar pickups. Playing those thru a Peavey amp with the saturation turned all the way up gave it a super nasty fuzzy metal sound (think Neil Young 'Hey Hey, My My' sound). I could still turn it back down for 'normal' bass sound, but it was nice to have that fuzzy option in my tool box.
💕 The ambient bass playing softly in the background
It always amazes me when the most basic build of something is STILL crazily work and detail intensive. I've seen Luthiers make these, and they put so much more work into it..but just seeing what you did is still pretty insane..
WOW, girl !!! This is an incredible demonstration of your gifts of skill, talent and tenacity..
Thank you very much, ma'am.
I don’t think I can properly express how impressive this project was to me! You very clearly know exactly what you’re doing and so bravo! It really makes me want to take on more difficult projects myself!
Absolutely stunning job and lovely design. I'm damn impressed and envious! So that's a Xylaphone, right? :)
You've got a Fran-tastic woodworking bench there. Loving it.
Technically, the word "xylophone" means "wood instrument," so yes, it is a xylaphone.
Nice job!
I have a shop where we do commercial bent laminate wood almost daily. On work with reverse curves we use a form similar to the inner form you made. The outer form is made less ridged so any minor variations in the thickness of the lamination stack will still clamp tight. The thickness of the laminations is dependent on the radius. For the ones you had to bend around we would have made the laminations considerably thinner. To cut the laminations we use a straight line rip saw with a blade that is designed to slightly shave the face of the cut so almost no saw marks show on the work and none show after lamination. Strips are kept in order so the grain pattern remains. Put a pencil V on the board first so you can reference them later. PS resaw blades generally don't work well on table saws because they require considerably more power. Our small SLR saw has 15hp.
Didn't think I would see Nick from Scary Pockets in a Xyla Foxlin video. This is the collab i didn't know i wanted. RUclips is awesome!
This looks awesome! One thing that you can do for fasteners in very hard woods like purple heart is to tap machine screw threads and use brass machine screw threads. I've only done it in acrylic, which worked well, but I've seen it used a few times hard types of wood
I was going to suggest the same thing. This has worked well for me in several types of hardwood and is way less stressful than hoping a wood screw wont twist off. I use a coarse machine screw thread then drill, tap and countersink the hole. Congratulations Xyla on an excellent build. I loved your teardrop trailer build too. Looking forward to watching more of your videos.
Also, a tip for the angled plugs... don't angle them on both ends :) Leave the top square so you can hammer it in, then trim it flush with a saw or something, it'll make your life so much easier.
Xyla: "Not that I'm liccing my bass, that would be weird"
Adam Neely: And I took that personally
doot doot doot doot dooo da doooooooo
I followed the process of this project on your social media, none of it did it justice like this video. That is absolutely stunning, and sounds great. I hope to see it hanging behind your head in more videos! Wishing you all the best, I can't imagine how rough the last few months have been. Love watching your content! I look forward to the next installation of Xyla Sands Wood.
Painfully detailed work there Xyla for a fantastic result. I know the pain of screws that snap off just before time! For tricky screw holes in difficult material one trick I've used is to cut a channel along the end of the screws and then use them like taps. Set a battery drill to screw slip setting and then turn the slip torque down lower than what would break the screw shaft. Then work the screw in and out of the wood/metal, clearing the channel until you have it all the way in. If you feel you need more mess in your workshop then definitely get a CNC machine. I laminated 5 x 18mm thick plywood sheets together for my second hydrofoil and the amount of waste wood off of that was stunning. If you want to go down the budget track for a CNC, I recommend you use an Arduino Nano, load it with GRBL and then run it with Estlcam which has some great instructional tutorials by the writer of the software.
You really set yourself a new bar. Can't wait to see where it goes from here. And I know you will appreciate the following...
I've worked with Purple Heartwood before. So you should have talked to me first. When I saw you opt to use it like you did, I knew you were in for a life changing experience. So I thought I might throw a little more trivia your way... Just so you are more well rounded.
1. Purple Heartwood is so solid it has almost no compression or expansion between wet and dry (Purple Heartwood is almost waterproof too), as well as it takes shocks like a champ. This made It ideal for internal bracing on large sailing cargo ships of old.
2. Breathing the saw dust can cause lung infections, so doing this right after COVID was probably risky.
3. Our oldest son wanted a stripper canoe out of Purple Heartwood. I had already built five of them, but not with Purple Heartwood. We knew this would be an epic build. Stapling alone was a monumental task, much less bending (you really can't steambox Purple Heart unless it's very thin)... AND wait for it... SANDING.
Although we got the shell off the form, a violent storm moved through and sent a 500 pound branch off the top of a large tree torpedoing the work and it's shelter, thus ending the build. Years later we rebuilt a large canoe designed for big river boiling whitewater, into a very fast Realtree Camo performance touring canoe for him. It's madin voyage was an overnighter in the Bayou.
4. (This one is directed to your Ash and Maple) when screwing down end pieces, especially those involving end grain, I strongly suggest using some sort of Pan Head or Washer Head and a Pilot Point Bit (think pocket hole jigs). These will squeeze the pieces together like a clamp, without trying to split the ends apart.
We'll I'll stop here and look forward to seeing you raise your bar even higher.
Till then keep your paddle wet and your seat dry.
Omg that is inspirational! Makes me want to get back to building instruments.
You and me both 😀
I think that bass looks fantastic! I was really impressed with the access provided to the upper frets. Speaking of which, I have seen luthier-made guitars that didn’t get half the effort on the frets that you put in to make a really playable instrument. Now you can do a video on a fancy case!
Got it right on the first time build.
Won't have doubted you for a second.
Keep reaching for the stars!
this looks so dope and you probably spent age getting it perfect, well done brilliant job
Oh my god, you're friends with Nick? Also, beautiful instrument and I hope the rest of your year goes better. :)
I love this video. Being a fan of your builds and also a fan of guitar making channels I enjoyed this one soooooo much. You are so good at it. I hope you'll try to make a guitar later. No purple heartwood though.
Yes purple heartwood, we love to watch her suffer
Xyla, I worked for a guy that made bent wood boats. We use to add about 1/2oz of fabric softener (Downy) to every gallon of water in the steamer. 5/4 oak bent like warm butter. Give it a try!
that was amazing, I am on my fifth bass, and have indeed used Purple heart, and yes its all about sanding, and sanding and sanding. thank you.
The thing about sanding is you're never "done"....you just get so sick and tired of sanding that you call it good enough. lol
I mask up, get my blocks out, knife, sheets up to 1000 grit, then get completely frustrated and tired around 400 and just go like “yup, feels smooth enough to me” as I quickly swipe the piece with my nearly numb hand.
Sanding is like being Sisyphus, pushing the rock up the hill knowing he is never done.
I want to see what Xyla can do with an exo-skeleton… show Allan Pan how it is done 😁😂
HURRAY ! you're back
Cool bass ! Next you should make a bass shaped like a bass🐟
With the neck of the guitar extending from the mouth of the fish perhaps?
All of the exotic woods are very tough on tools & have their own particulars regarding handling, workability, finish etc. I was a Design Engr. for LeBlanc Clarinets & other products. We used Grenadilla, also called African Blackwood & it's amazing material. Tapping it is similar to a hard Brass, no inserts needed. One thing about exotic woods that you don't have w/ metals. After extensive machining, the wood had to 'relax' in a temperature & humidity controlled room from 2-6 months to recover most of its mechanical properties which included it's tonal qualities. Then additional machining could be performed. There was two(?) 'relaxation' sessions given to the wood during production & the NEW Corporate owners(after 2007) didn't like that. So they 'sped up' the process & in about 6 months there were cracks radiating from the tone holes in a $20K Clarinet were no dealer/customer had any previous concerns. Very disappointing & unnecessary.
I've been building thing"s for over 50 years and i"m impressed with your work . excellent!
He's such a good bassist. Great job on this project
This young Lady has crazy awesome wood working skills.
That bass is absolutely beautiful.
Just like it's maker.
I miss having a shop like hers.
I used mine to scratch build arcade game cabinets I'd install custom 60 in 1 multicade game boards in with braigedia harness, led lighted buttons including flipper and shake buttons on the sides to play the digital pinball game that's one of the 60 games.
An led lighted mini trackball for centipede and millipede games.
A bunch more to many to list.
I'm reparing one now I did over 10 years ago the Rocker owner had damaged during a party.
I learned wood working helping my Dad build a wood airplane.
I'm amazed, great 1st one. Welcome to the electric guitar making addiction! I love how you used some semi-hollow dot 335 techniques with the bending. You had this like you have crafted guitars before, so..very cool. One thing you might try on frets is undercutting them on the ends. It prevents fret sprout later, and you HAVE to do it with fretboard binding. You still blop some superglue/ebony dust on there and bye bye fret slot gap and no sharp tang edges later in the years...nice. Most builders agree about Purpleheart, no doubt. There is a reason the big corps have used certain woods for many decades and leave the exotics to the custom shop divisions. BUT...The best part was how happy you were with it when it was done! Please do another one when you have time. You might even think about entering the next Great Guitar Build Off from Crimson Guitars.
3:35 As someone who's never seen wood bending live, this is amazing! :O
I l9ve how the neck grain popped as soon as you sprayed it. Beautiful!
You do great work. A pleasure watching a skilled woodworker (who's better looking than Nick Zammeti and that Bourbon Moth guy) at work.
We really did a very nice job.
I've been working a lot with wood, and saw nothing bad in the whole process.
Excepted the small mistake with the router, shit happens:)
Nice care about security, which is important.
To avoid tearing a piece of wood in the back when you drill it, just use clamps to fix it tightly on another piece of wood underside.
Driiling from both side is often a cause of mistake.
Using tape also helps.
Wow - just simply WOW! To pull that off on a first try building an instrument is simply off the charts impressive!
Purple Heart is known as a Iron Wood, and it is used as Keel tembers for very large sailing vessels. It is also super beautiful. I seen others mention to use UV protection on it. Hope you had fun with it.
Simply amazing! I have built a Les Paul out of raw wood and it is no easy feat to get everything right in one go, you have done a wonderful job
building this base! Its very refreshing to see new ideas come to fruition as you have accomplished!
Her skills at making a custom bass is extraordinary!!!
This bass is one of a kind!
Nowhere on earth is there another!!!
There are a lot of basses like that out there.
@@patbassman8251 where?, by what company? I would like to see them, the only thing close is the Yamaha silent guitar.
Love your choice of purple heart wood. I first heard about it in high school like 40yrs ago.
Just watched your tear-drop camper and now this video, instant sub, you are incredible!
That is some beautiful craftsmanship it's a awesome and creative design love it.
I saw your tear drop trailer build video and now this video has won me over finally. NEW SUBSCRIBER!
I have to say, that you must have incredible patience.
It’s quite admirable to see that.
Nice job on this project. Pretty amazing.
I recognize that steam box!
In the 1980's, one of my father's colleagues happened to be on the Canadian Olympic doubles luge team. The team was not well-funded, however, so they only had one sled. This sled was saved for competitions, so there was no way for them to train on an actual sled because they didn't have an extra one. They had most of one, but the runners (called kufens) had been broken in a crash.
Enter my Dad. The luge team knew my Dad was known as a hobbyist woodworker, as well, so they asked him if he could build some kufens, which are these long, curved, slightly flexible, wooden things. So he build a steam box much like yours (his source of steam was two kettles on a kerosene camp stove), and steamed and bents several boards which he glued together into 2 laminated kufens. And they worked, and were actually used on the training sled of the Canadian Olympic team.
Great video Xyla great video and you kept smiling all the way through it, amazing!! Thanks!!
So glad to see you back at work! I find your videos a great mix of fun and educational, and I've definitely missed them.
I'm working on a Star Wars droid, and there's a big online community around all that, and one of the things pretty much every new member (myself included) says at some point is "holy crap there's so much sanding involved!" Doesn't matter if they're working in wood or styrene or 3d printed or even aluminium, it feels like the main task of building anything (or at least, anything where clean aesthetics are involved) is sanding.
Finally - as someone who has had breathing issues all his life, the "making decisions more slowly" is a symptom of oxygen shortage. Muscles can pull way more energy than even healthy lungs can provide and it's easy to starve the brain when you've had a respiratory illness. I find that pausing frequently and letting the anaerobic reserves rebuild is important if I'm doing a highly physical task. (And since my job is moving boxes on and off of trucks, I do a lot of highly physical tasks!) What works for me might not work for you and I appreciate how the mental stress of "I'm not doing anything!" can sometimes be worse than the physical stress of "my lungs can't keep up!" but it can't hurt to say it.
That bass is sooo dang pretty! Bravo!
nice work, I know nothing about guitars but I know a lot about woodworking. It is great to see some new techniques like laser cuting and CAD used in woodworking. You are also very fun to listen to and pretty funny. I am showing my daughter (13) your videos. My son too,
I wish the tools and materials you have were available when I was a teen working on guitars and making one for my shop project. Nice work.
You are actually insane with all of these builds
Nice build. Extra thumbs up for featuring the best bass player on the planet!
"that was very intentional" perfect. Brilliant job.
Awesome projec. For shaping the profile of the neck, you can get a drawer scraper (and sharpener) from Stew Mac. It's just a flatbpiece of metal that you create a burr on the edges and just scrape the wood away. Easy to control and actually goes pretty fast. It won't dig in like a spoke shave and you can see what you are working on unlike a plane.
TFW when Joey B. just SHOWS up in a woodworking video you just randomly found! 'O'
great video! I want to build a bass from scratch some day it's just scary! Thanks for reminding me how much work goes into it XD
I've just watched a few of your videos. I'm in awe of your imagination and determination. The bass is awesome, as is your skill and enthusiasm.
That is just amazing. You have serious woodworking skills!
BEAUTIFULLY designed bass.
Incredible Build, just wow!
Love the informal yet informative narration style - subscribed!
When i started watching i was wishing I was doing this, but by the end i was glad YOU were doing it.
Oh WOW! That is the best base I’ve EVER seen!! It looks like flames in the shape of a guitar! Outstanding!
It’s interesting that you play base! I have played guitar since high school, and took up the base guitar about three years later. I even played in a little band for a while, but we didn’t get very many “gigs”.
this build is EPIC. So many skills and areas involved.
I’m jealous of your tool shop. Beautiful work. 👏👏👏
Such a work of art. Thank you.
You absolutely won my mind with this video of yours. Such incredible work ethics you have, of getting everything right even to the very last details. Absolutely loved that. That Guitar is an work of art. This video is very joyous.
cool, icing on the cake is that you got Nick to test drive it!
That is a beautiful instrument. Well done.
60 yr old carpenter here. You are a blast. Quick tip = use screw type clamp (pony etc.) You will own that Basstard. Squeeze clamps have their place, but sometimes ya just need a work horse. Carry on.
Absolutely amazing build
Just watched this entire video for the third time. Why is this so fascinating?
This is the first time I watch his channel. Wow, I can't believe that this young girl builds a bass all by herself from scratch with her pair of beautiful hands. She is amazing.
I stumbled across your site and BOOM! You are the perfect woman.You click all the boxes and you make basses,unreal.Who's the lucky person that wins your heart?I'm a senior bass player so please take this as a compliment.Great site too! I had to add the bass turned out great, I'm super impressed.Nick's a fine player . Subbed!
You inspire me to get off my lazy retired arse and build something. Thanks for the motivation!
I have only one thing to say... WOW !!! 😲... Bravo !!!😊👍
This is massively impressive. Watching this come together was on a par with full time luthiers I also watch. Awesome work
The parallels in the craft you are practicing are so closely related to Class A die making and repair
I started in woodworking in the 80s then transitioned into precision machining and Tool and Die
Excellent work young lady
Speechless. Amazing instrument.
I LOLed at the "steam coming out of my ears" line. Hilarious!
Awesome build. It's so cool to see a Jacob Collier fan in the wild, I love his bass playing on "Close to you" and "time alone with you"!! 😁
I think this is the most satisfying video I've seen in many years, when art and craftsmanship meet a wonder appears!
Wow, just yesterday I discovered your channel. You can do EVERYTHING, and everything top quality. My admiration. Brava!!!! 🌹🌹🌹🌹