Hyperbole much?I can't see a problem with the logos. Did you scratch the Gibson logo off the guitar as well? What about your clothes, do you remove any brand labeling from them? Your shoes? Your car? Did you fill in your Floyd Rose logo with bondo? Do your amps and pedals still have logos on them? Did you rip the numbers off your house and take down the street signs so no one knows where you live? What about your mailing address so they don't know what city or state? You're advertising for all those as well, right?
Hyperbole much?
He doesn't like logos on his guitar. You don't have a problem with them. If a half-century on this dirtball has taught me anything, it's that in matters of taste, people have a right to like what they like.
Oh, well I'll just leave them there. It's true everything has a logo on it now a days. Thanks for the great suggestions.I may be a nobody but I paid for them and I have to look at them.
Some mothers aluminum mag polish and the soft foam attachment on a dremel on the slow speed.
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I'm just trying to understand the logic behind it because it seems a bit pervasive these days. People feel that they're advertising a pickup for free, I wanna know how far this line of thinking extends, and how they react to those other branded products in their daily life.
Here's an example you might be able to relate to. Have you ever bought a used car from a dealer? You're driving away in your Ford or Toyota or whatever, and nobody thinks anything of it. But invariably, there's a license plate frame from the dealer on the car. I never feel like I'm advertising for the car company, but I always feel like I'm advertising for the dealership until I get a chance to get different license plate frames.
For the record, names on pickups don't bother me in the least, though I'd rather have something that says BASSLINES on it than DUNCAN DESIGNED.