Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

Dabatross

New member
Hey guys,

Is it possible to achieve the glossy/shiny finish as seen on ebony fretboards with rosewood? If so, what can I use to get this finish on my guitar? Thanks.
 
Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

Yeah, you can burnish the wood with a micro abrasive sandpaper but it will be a pain to do well without removing the frets. Start with a 15 micron paper (1000x) and next with 5 micron, (2500x) finishing with .5 micron (9000x). Keep in mind that rosewood is a ring porous wood so it won't look as shiny and smooth as ebony, which has no visible pore structure.

Alternatively, you can apply a couple coats of Tung oil, letting each cure first, then buff to a low luster sheen. It won't be glossy, but it will provide some luster. It'll take a couple weeks to do properly by letting the oil cure.

BTW, make sure you use real, 100% tung oil. Many products that are labeled as Tung oil are not -- they're a wiping varnish. Formsby's, MinWax, etc are examples of faux Tung oil. Check the label, if it lists petroleum products as part of the composition then it's not tung oil.


You can get the micro abrasive paper here:
http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.aspx?c=2&p=33004&cat=1,43072

You can get tung oil here, as well:
http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.aspx?c=2&p=20049&cat=1,190,42942
 
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Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

It really depends on your individual piece of rosewood. I had a piece of rosewood on a les paul studio a little while back that always looked pale and chalky no matter how I treated it and took care of it.

The rosewood board on my guitar at the moment has much nicer grain and color. Just a good oil treatment like for any other rosewood fretboard gives it a nice healthy glow.

I really think the gloss you are describing, as pzaxtl mentioned, is a trait of ebony as per the grain.
 
Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

hey guys thanks for the replies.. i'm going to try and find a picture of the look i'm after but it could be difficult. i think you're probably right though that its mostly a trait of the tight gain on ebony wood. Just a description of what i'm talking about, if you see a new ebony guitar the fretboard will usually shine as you look at it from different light angles. comparably, if you look at a rosewood fretboard it doesn't have a shine to it at all. the sanding might work with 1000-2000 grit, but i'm not sure if it's going to give the luster i'm looking for. i probably wouldn't want to mess around with tung oil on the fretboard too much because i tend to bite my fingernails a lot and i'd end up eating half of the oil that was on the board lol
 
Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

I have an Epiphone Dot with a rosewood board that I can see myself in

It is possible.

I have never done anything with it except play the pants off of it
 
Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

Not to hijack, but doesn't part of the sound that rosewood imparts to a guitar's tone, caused by it's porous nature? Doesn't a applying a coat to the fingerboard risk changing that tone?
 
Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

I have a rosewood board on my Ric bass that's nice and glossy. it seems to have some kind of finish on it though.
 
Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

its possible. you have to jet wash the rosewood, to fill in the pores. then you use scotch brite, steal wool and 600 micron. its a *****, but you can do it.
 
Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

I have a rosewood board on my Ric bass that's nice and glossy. it seems to have some kind of finish on it though.

its probably been buffed. does it have film in the pores, that you can scrape out? as in buffing compound?
 
Re: Glossy/shiny fretboard only possible with ebony?

yeah, you can burnish the wood with a micro abrasive sandpaper but it will be a pain to do well without removing the frets. Start with a 15 micron paper (1000x) and next with 5 micron, (2500x) finishing with .5 micron (9000x). Keep in mind that rosewood is a ring porous wood so it won't look as shiny and smooth as ebony, which has no visible pore structure.

Alternatively, you can apply a couple coats of tung oil, letting each cure first, then buff to a low luster sheen. It won't be glossy, but it will provide some luster. It'll take a couple weeks to do properly by letting the oil cure.

Btw, make sure you use real, 100% tung oil. Many products that are labeled as tung oil are not -- they're a wiping varnish. Formsby's, minwax, etc are examples of faux tung oil. Check the label, if it lists petroleum products as part of the composition then it's not tung oil.

+1
 
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