Aceman: check out these I built!

orpheo

Well-known member
Here's my story. Hope you like it :)

I am Orpheo. When I joined almost 10 years ago, I was just a snotty-nosed kid from the Netherlands. I am no longer snotty nosed kid from the Netherlands, but rather a long-haired, obstinate 30+ year old from the Netherlands ;) I never was truly satisfied with my gear so I started using parts by Warmoth to build my arsenal. I am willing to bet some of the folks who have been here for YEARS will remember my warmoth gear. I used to own a LOT. i still do, but no longer use it...

In 2012, I met my best friend. We spoke about guitars, drank way too much beer and thought of building guitars. In 2013 we simply started. Bought some timber, bought some tools and the first two guitars were made and played at the end of '13. Forum member Mincer was one of the first EVER to play a guitar of mine!

2014 was the year I started learning how to build in bulk (as much as possible, next to my daytime job). I met my current fiancee/girlfriend who has been a major driving force behind my work and by october 2014 I let loose 8 guitars upon this world. Of those 8, only 3 still exist in their first, original form. Two were merged into one, another totally rebuild and one destroyed. I can't recall what happened with that last one :P 2015, I started working more and more for myself; I experimented a bit with high gloss finishes later on in that year, I started with new shapes and at the end of 2015, I made 14 guitars.

Then, 2016. My business partner preferred to go on holidays abroad, leaving me alone to run the business (as we had become a true bizz since 2015, in the legal sense anyway). I surfed through a burnout, build guitars and at the end of '16, 24 guitars were completed (many I've posted here in this thread and on this forum in general). All the while, I was trying to hone in on what I wanted to build, exactly.

Now, 2017 is done for 2/3 of the way and I've already done 22 guitars. 30 isn't inconceivable at all, I have to admit.

My designs in '13 were so different than now. I wanted to make what I wanted to own: a stripped down Les Paul 'standard', with nothing but a good maple top, black or white limba body, exotic neck (rosewood, ovangkol or otherwise) and great hardware. Simple dye. Nothing too fancy. I was able to make and sell those for $1699 with a hardshell case, seymour duncan pickups, gotoh hardware etc.

Nobody wanted that. Handmade and 'stripped down'? Thanks, but no thanks, was the message I got ;) So, I started using more exotic woods, more unique features, more elaborately figured tops, laminated necks and as I said, high gloss as of '15/'16.

I have to change the pricing accordingly, however, as much as I hate that. Timber and time cost money; but basically...? In its core, it's still the same. I still don't do inlay unless I have a really, really good reason. I still don't do binding and I don't want to do that either. I use side dots made of steel and brass so you get a duo-color look. I use contrasting pinstripes between the fretboard and neck blank, just because I like the look. I hand-roll all the fretboard edges, I buff everything by hand.

As to my methods. I don't use parts. I HATE guys who claim to make their own stuff, but simply buy their parts and have a professional sprayer spray the finish. Fretwork? Whatever's out of the box is good enough. Too bad the action is as high as a Weissenborn. Tone-matching? Nop. Multi-lam necks? Nop. Environmentially conscious? nop. There's no craft. i want to know, learn and master this craft. That's why I do EVERYTHING myself and if I don't do it myself, it's because it is more cost efficient for YOU, the customer, but without sacrificing what makes my guitar or my work, my work. For example: my lumber yard often bookmatches my tops and glues them to the backs. That is a cost-saving measure that happens to give me great results. Same with thicknessing my ebony fretboards and getting the CITES permits. I am still the one cutting, carving and sanding the guitar. I'm the one laying down the template, drawing it out with a pencil and setting up the router(table). Having my lumber yard do the basic work takes stress off of me. You can compare this to a painter who doesn't mix his own paints. Sure, he could, but when a paintstore does it just as good, why not? Having it routed out and sanded by a CNC you did not program, finishing the guitar: that's a whole different ball park. That's more like having someone make a line drawing and all you have to do is paint by numbers.

So yeah. I do it all myself. I do sell, but I'm also building just to learn. I want to be better as a luthier NOW, while I'm still under the radar (but, hopefully, slowly emerging) so I can post incrementally more beautiful guitars as I improve.

What began with one guitar shape has turned into a lineup with 1 shape in 9 iterations, 5 other shapes and 2 basses.

I don't see myself, my company, as a customshop perse. What is a customshop anyway? Is my business model ' made to measure' or 'bespoke'? I don't know. I think a bit of both. I can accommodate so many wishes and I can tailor the designs to a huge degree without additional hidden costs or great discomfort of my construction process. But for example, 101 ply binding on top and 96 ply on the back, 1962 piece inlay in the fretboard and paua purfling? No. I surely COULD do it, but I'd rather not, because it's too far removed from what I believe a guitar should be.

Each guitar I make (and sell!) is the result of a lengthy conversation and in the end, you get a piece of my personality, of my soul. A guitar is first and foremost an instrument, made to make music. It's here to do just that. And by choosing the right pickups, color, shape, hardware and timbers, we personalize the instrument more and more. But that's exactly that: personalization of an instrument. It's not a fashion accessoire. I want to remove the limitations you set on yourself technically and tonally, I want to make instruments that blend away with yourself when you play.

I will take it down a notch when 2018 hits. I would have made, eventually, close to 100 guitars when 2018 ends; I can't work 40 hours a week at guild Guitars and build 30 guitars a year :) There's a real limitation to what I can do. Not technically but temporally.

So. yeah. That's kinda my story.

I build guitars because I like to build guitars. I make what I think is pretty. I hope more people feel like I do and eventually decide to simply drop me a line, dare to ask me for pricing (for so long my website aint done: need 4 more guitars to be done for that to happen!) and pull the trigger on a handmade made-to-measure guitar with bespoke features.



Build. Built. Which one is it?! OH well...

you've seen this one:

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OK the right one is a special one. Proto #2 of the guitar I posted earlier (the speedy project). I will remove the neck and install a new one with a totally new scale. I don't like this one yet. I wanna lighten her up to (11 lbs!!!!) and change the neck profile. More on that later!
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I'm still a 3 pickup LP nerd. Can't help it!
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My 'Star Trek Anniversary' set
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just a crappy pic of a great guitar

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One of my personals. purpleheart top with padouk sapwood contrast on a honduras mahogany body with walnut back. ebony/wenge/ebony neck, ebony board. custom made pickups. a major screamer, howler and sweet lover all in one. Hand applied shellac. I will sand her clean one day and finish her in high gloss though, to preserve the purple hues.

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That's not even close to everything of the last 18 months but it is a fairly good representation.
 
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Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

the sizing is all odd. weird. I'm kinda missing Photobucket now :(


just a few more

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maybe I should make a new collage now I redid a few of these last guitars?
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Holy carp! When the &^%^ did you build all of these? HOW did you build them? From scratch, lots, a little of both? What hardware are you using? What pups?

I was critical of this?!?!?!?!? I call BS. Must have been one time one morning before the coffee hit!

Triple bucker w/ F holes and a standard term - I'm not a fan but the isn't the point. Dude - seriously epic body of work!!!!!!


Are you selling these? Playing them? Just decorating the walls? Please give the whole story in paragraph form. I can't be the only one who wants to know this. You ARE an under the radar kind of dude....


Then again, building all of that doesn't leave a ton of post time!
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

I love the guitar with the reverse Parker-looking headstock. I could rock that baby all night.

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Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Holy crap, Dude! I love at least half of those and would happily take ANY one of them. Hard to pick a favorite, but the one with the Hipshot Babygrand calls out to me. What are those pickups?
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Love looking at these- and the few I've played were wonderful.
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Holy crap, Dude! I love at least half of those and would happily take ANY one of them. Hard to pick a favorite, but the one with the Hipshot Babygrand calls out to me. What are those pickups?

Hi, those pickups are the seymour Duncan fuglybuckers :D I modded the bridge pickup to have just a touch more output and bite, but overall: great pickups :) I don't like the Babygrand bridge, especially now they have a 'normal' stoptail/tuneomatic combination. just too many issues for my taste (and too finnicky to install).

@Aceman: I'll make a nice post later
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

I edited the opening post. I don't mean to turn this into an advertorial. I just want to tell my story and share (what I believe to be) pretty guitars.
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

wow is right. the star trek ones are sick - dig the parker type headstock.

how in the heck do the 2 bridge rail humbuckers work like that?
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

wow is right. the star trek ones are sick - dig the parker type headstock.

how in the heck do the 2 bridge rail humbuckers work like that?

by using the right magnets that wont degauss each other :)
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Two requests:

Could you post more information about the pickup combos you got in each guitar as well as the neat wirings you got in em.

Bestow upon me your vast knowledge of control placement. Because from your pictures it appears to me that you must choose their precise location based off of either some advanced formula or whatever constellation has the strongest guitar-playing energy at that time.
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Dude!!!!!! Seriously!!!!!!!


What a great story. I don't think anyone knows all that - or that most don't...
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Hi, those pickups are the seymour Duncan fuglybuckers :D I modded the bridge pickup to have just a touch more output and bite, but overall: great pickups :) I don't like the Babygrand bridge, especially now they have a 'normal' stoptail/tuneomatic combination. just too many issues for my taste (and too finnicky to install).

@Aceman: I'll make a nice post later

Ironically, I don't really care for the baby grand bridge either but it was the easiest way to identify the guitar.
I really like the looks of those "uglybuckers" but then again I like a lot of things that other people think are ugly.
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Two requests:

Could you post more information about the pickup combos you got in each guitar as well as the neat wirings you got in em.

Bestow upon me your vast knowledge of control placement. Because from your pictures it appears to me that you must choose their precise location based off of either some advanced formula or whatever constellation has the strongest guitar-playing energy at that time.

oh wow, that would be a tall order. The majority is Seymour Duncan. The neck humbuckers are hybrids with the jazz, 59, pearlyN and seth lover as its base (combination of those, never same coil twice). Bridge humbuckers: SH6N/Screaming Demon or Fullshred hybrids, fullshred with a JB, Alt8 or black winter.

p90's are just that, classic p90's.

tele pickups: donahue lead, alnico2pro rhythm

strat: SSl1's, SSL5's, Parallel axis singles.

that purple superstrat hardtail: QTuners (made here in the Netherlands).

As for controls: depends on what I want, what I need and my mood. The slab body guitars (i.e.: no carved laminated top) have simple controls. Preferably all in 1 cavity. The strats with the odd placed 5way switch: I prefer it that way. out of my way, but easy to switch when I need. Just my thing; I can place that switch anywhere you like (almost ;) ). Sometimes, when I rework a guitar (like that ' white tiger' LP with 3 pickups, trem and F-Holes, which had a TOTALLY different configuration at first), I am bound by the control cavity I routed the first time around. Now, I try to imagine 'what COULD I **** up later on if I wanna rebuild this in a totally new way' and try to extrapolate my needs for a possible future (like chess) so the controls will be placed in a 'normal' location. That being said: the way the controls are placed on that 'white tiger' LP makes that guitar one of the most comfortable guitars ever.

As for wiring: I try to keep it simple for the end user. but that's too much to explain right now.


If you have questions on particular builds or you wanna see more, just let me know. I've got a lot more where that came from. Newly builds as well as rebooted guitars.
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

If (and hopefully when) I am in a position to buy a high end guitar, I would certainly prefer to give my money to you or a small buider like you than to a large company that mass-produces. Your level of care and quality provides, imho, way better value per dollar spent.

Instruments are like dogs...they just seem to know when they are in a home with love.
 
Re: Aceman: check out these I built!

Really digging the double cut guitar with 3 p90s. Definitely my cup of tea. Good stuff.


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