anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

RG 2570

New member
I was wondering if there is any tricks that can darken a all white JB to a cream color? even a few tints down from white would be good? :)
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

humbuckers dont get caries... lol


i suggest umm .. i have no idea actually
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

Nugget210 said:
just think about ur teeth...dont clean em for a year

:laugh2: you know how long it would take a duncan to yellow? :smack:
a lot longer than teeth :rolleyes: :laugh2:
I am sure someone here knows a aging or yellowing process for double white duncans :)
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

maybe dip in in coffee for like a second. dont do it for to long though.
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

I did this with an APH-1 and a CC. I brewed a pot of very strong coffee and took a little sponge and "painted" the bobbins. I painted them until I was satisfied with the result. About that time the doorbell rang. It was a courier. He handed me a letter. I opened it and it was a "Cease & Desist" order from DiMarzio...
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

butch has the best idea yet, paint on the strongest coffee you can get. it will stain them a nice cream color
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

Maybe staining them with a brownish shoe polish? It works on maple fretboards, but I don't know if it will soak into the plastic.

I found with the coffee trick I soaked them (white single coil covers) for a week in black coffee but once I dried off the covers I wiped off all the coloring. I guess if you let them air dry and don't rub them, it would be a pseudo creme I don't know.
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

get some yellow Rid dye and delute it with water, cause it's pretty friggin strong by itself. I say 50/50. Paint it on. If you want a little more brown into it, make it 50 dye, 25 water/ 25 strong as hell coffee.
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

Fusion1 said:
Maybe staining them with a brownish shoe polish? It works on maple fretboards, but I don't know if it will soak into the plastic.

Shoe polish will come off over time.


Fusion1 said:
I found with the coffee trick I soaked them (white single coil covers) for a week in black coffee but once I dried off the covers I wiped off all the coloring. I guess if you let them air dry and don't rub them, it would be a pseudo creme I don't know.

If you're using replacement parts that are not genuine Fender parts, the tea or coffee will come off. Genuine Fender parts will stain permanantly. Seymour Duncan's replacement single coil covers won't keep the stain either. The humbucker bobbins will though.
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

BS123 said:
I did this with an APH-1 and a CC. I brewed a pot of very strong coffee and took a little sponge and "painted" the bobbins. I painted them until I was satisfied with the result. About that time the doorbell rang. It was a courier. He handed me a letter. I opened it and it was a "Cease & Desist" order from DiMarzio...

:laugh2: :laugh2: :laugh2:
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

beandip's got it right according to S. Duncan himself... he actually said that specific name, RID...
 
Re: anyway to make a white duncan a cream one?

I've done it many of times, including my SD single coil covers.
 
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