Re: Paint checks, aging relic crackle effect?
I once witnessed a clinic by Fender Custom Shop master builder John English, who reliced a Custom Shop Esquire on the spot. He used a can of 'Dust-Off' spray for the crackling effect (you can also use chewing gum remover spray for textile to spray on the body). This contains either freon or liquid nitrogen, he wasn't certain about that. Anyhow, it's awfully cold. The temperature in the room will do the rest. John applied the spray three times in one hour. He then made some dents in the finish by gently beating on the guitar's body with a chain of belt buckles ('These are Genuine Fender Strap buckles, people!'), and made some larger dents using a small wood plane. To further enhance the deeper dents and scratches where the actual wood was showing, and to enhance the crackling in the laquer, I'm not sure what he used. He rubbed the body with some dark coloured stuff, I think it was some block. The dark colour accentuaded the crackles in the finish, and actually made it look really old.
John English is a cool guy, he has a nice sense of humour. He also spoke of some guy who had a poly-finished Tokai Strat he wanted to relic. He put the guitar in the freezer for some time, and then laid it in his oven for a little while. Indeed, after a little while he heard a cracking noise, and eagerly went to look at the guitar to see how things got along. To indeed find the body cracked... in half!!! :laugh2: