Well, just confirmed with Dennis at SD. No can do. Bare Knuckle gets away with double cream because they're in England, and the trade mark doesn't apply. And he also said 'Parchment" is a color they also have but it's much closer to white. Argh, freakin' Larry Dimarzio. Makes me NOT want to buy his products. Now I'm seriously looking at the Steve Stevens.
Can anyone explain this? I can’t bottle “coke” in Laos then sell it in the US. I’d understand if Bare Knuckle (or anyone else) could sell double cream in a country where the trademark isn’t registered, but why or how can they sell in the US?
DiMarzio was doing it first. (And before people point out the double cream PAFs from the past; 1) Gibson didn’t make them without covers, 2) they weren’t double cream intentionally, and 3) they didn’t get a trademark on double cream pickups.)
It always made sense to me. Don't understand why Gibson and Fender never have done the same with their body/headstock shapes.DiMarzio made double creams on purpose, as a design element. When one saw a double cream pickup in the '70s and '80s, the only thing anybody thought was "DiMarzio" – whether it actually was or not. A certain aesthetic marker, placed there by design, solely for aesthetic purposes, that becomes synonymous with your brand out in the market, whether you intended for it to do so or not, is legally enough to establish an acquired trademark. It doesn't matter whether other companies were doing the same. It only matters what the market sees when they see that certain aesthetic design. And its perception was: cream = DiMarzio, almost universally.
It's a stupid piece of plastic.Every pickup company uses the same basic platform. Has an auto company copyritten a color? OK, yeah, there's "Fire Engine Red" and "Ferrari Red", and "Torch Red", ect. but no auto company owns a copyright on "Red".Sorry, it may have been a clever business move, but that doesn't make it right. Whatever. I now have it down to two. Given the price of the Bare Knuckle, if I want to try it, I'll have to wait till January. Thanks all.
It always made sense to me. Don't understand why Gibson and Fender never have done the same with their body/headstock shapes.
Coke is an international trademark.
If you look at Japanese guitars in the 80s, lots of them had double cream pickups to cash in on the popularity of the Super Distortion. Schaller also made DiMarzio copies.
DiMarzio was doing it first. (And before people point out the double cream PAFs from the past; 1) Gibson didn’t make them without covers, 2) they weren’t double cream intentionally, and 3) they didn’t get a trademark on double cream pickups.)
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It's a stupid piece of plastic. So why is the color so important?
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That doesn’t explain why a company can infringe on that trademark of they are built outside the US. I understand they may only own the trademark in the US leaving the rest of the world open, but how does it work here? Or is BKP just too small of a fish still? Same with like Throbak, etc.?
Happy to be a Mutant.Guitar. Matters.
It's a stupid piece of plastic. So why is the color so important?
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