My dream guitar is a 1950 demo Esquire. They were thin bodied at an inch and a half thick, finished in jet black cellulose acetate butyrate (an old-school spray-on plastic, basically - similar to the stuff that was later used to make P.A.F. bobbins) with a white polystyrene guard (a hard plastic that doesn't yellow like the later ABS white guards - the demo guards were basically made from the stuff that plastic airplane/car/tank models are made of). They had no truss rods, therefore no skunk stripes or headstock plugs. They're the sharpest looking guitars that Fender ever made in my opinion, and I love the body thickness and pine wood. Only 2 to 3 dozen of these were produced. They were shown at NAMM, or passed around as demo instruments to shops and working musicians. Most that did survive had a factory retrofitted truss rod neck installed. B.B. King actually ended up with one of these demos, according to the man himself. He ended up ditching it because the neck didn't have a truss rod, and it bowed.