Re: LIVE NOW - Guest Luthier Series - Peter Crossley (Crossley Guitars)
Re: LIVE NOW - Guest Luthier Series - Peter Crossley (Crossley Guitars)
Pete, thanks for doing this. Espeically for young guns like myself.
1. Your body style certainly is unique, where did the inspiration come from?
2. Did you start out repairing, and move into building, or just jump head first into the solidbody world?
3. Have you thought about doing a semi hollow, or full acoustic model?
4. On average, how many guitars a year do you produce?
5. Is it just you doing it, or do you have someone else helping out?
6. You seem to get a varity of colors rarely seen, what type and brand of stain are you using?
7. What made you join the SDUGF?
8. Most underrated tool in your shop?
9. Favorite tool in your shop?
10. Craziest experience with a build or repair? Perhaps customer?
I've got a few more, but Elmo's on so I'll be back after naptime.
1) I think the other answers got this one
2) I always used to repair/tinker/mutilate my own guitars and worked on my freinds guitars, but not as an occupation. This may sound crazy, but I woke up one day and said to myself " I am going to build guitars for a living"
needless to say it wasnt that easy, but I got there in the end....
3) the H series is a semi hollow, I have been thinking very seriously about an archtop for about 18 months. I have a lovely piece of quatersawn Sitka spruce 4 inches thick that is just aclimatising to our brutal Aussie weather.
4) I try my ****dest to produce 4 guitars every 12weeks, thats one every 3 weeks, so thats around 15-17 per year.
I want to kick that up to 25 next year. and I have gone some way to improving the build time.
5) just me !!
6) I mix and match stains a fair bit to see what happens, if you are after really muddy brown I've got a million of em !!!
I am lucky to have a good relationship with my Nitro supplier, who is really good at listening to my feeble descriptions of colour and producing tints that match the ideas in my head.
The gold top laquer I mix up myself using bronzing powder, like they did back in the fifties.
The nice thing about that, is that I know in about 20 years the nitro will craze a little (cos its nitro) and the bronze will oxidise, giving it that greenish hue..
7) I met Seymour and Evan when they came out to Australia and this place became a natural progression from there,
8) what a great question !!! I would initially say my laminate trimmer, which I use for all my routs, but it think it is my humble 1 metre stainless steel ruler!!!! I would be lost without that.
9) I love tool questions !!
tricky difficult one this, a while ago someone asked me if I could only have 10 tools, what would they be...
and thinking about that hurt my head...
Truth is I love all my tools dearly. Maybe Japanese pull saws? they are such a joy to use.
10) not so much crazy as testing was a left handed H series I built recently.
I had big signs over all the components marked "LEFT" in big letters!!
I also get the guys that ring up and the conversation goes like this:
Hi , I like a custom guitar built, sort of a double cutaway, with a flame maple top, carved and with a PRS style headstock and body carve, Oh yeah could you put MOP birds as inlay into the neck as well, and a black headstock plate.
"Would you like me to put Paul Reed Smith on the headstock as well?" I ask
"Yeah that would be really cool" they invariably reply
at this point I mention that the music shops already have these guitars hanging on their walls, all you have to do is walk in and buy one...........:banghead:
great questions !!