No one's mentioned bobbin toppers. They're not perfect, but for someone with a cheap black A2Pro lying around or available, a couple of bobbin toppers can make it double cream for a couple of dollars.
You know what the worst part about this is?
That DiMarzio's cream often comes out greenish and can look really goofy if there is real cream (such as pickup rings) around for contrast. Luckily that doesn't affect too many of their pickups but it just adds some icing to the cake in the face.
Dano was making Silvertones for Sears as a private label brand.... and Danelectro was putting lipstick pups on their guitars since the late '50s early '60s... before them it was Sears/Silvertone.
:boggled: I don't know about that. Mine look pretty much like cream:
Grandturk said:You don't like the pickup? Don't buy it. For me, I like Dimarzio pickups (as I said before, I like Duncans, EMGs, Fralins, etc, etc, etc). But right now, Dimarzio gets my money.
We're grownups, though, so we can deal with it.
... Thanks for that info, dude... :friday:Dano was making Silvertones for Sears as a private label brand.
Thanks for weighing in with your pertinent opinion on Dimarzios discussed on the Dimarzio......oops I mean Seymour Duncan forum.
Its a trademark, not a patent.
Back in the day, if you had double creams, you had Dimarzio pickups. The image of an all cream humbucker was synonymous with the Dimarzio brand. They trademarked that symbol as the symbol of Dimarzio.
Wrong. I know a guy who had a '50's burst LP, and when he took the covers off in the mid-70's, there were double-cream PAFs underneath. I think the existence of such PAFs over 15 years before Dimarzio came along may be the key to un-doing Larry's ridiculous trademark, but no has sufficient money, time, and interest to see it through.
I'm no lawyer but I don't believe that prior art can invalidate a trademark the way that it can with a patent.Wrong. I know a guy who had a '50's burst LP, and when he took the covers off in the mid-70's, there were double-cream PAFs underneath. I think the existence of such PAFs over 15 years before Dimarzio came along may be the key to un-doing Larry's ridiculous trademark, but no has sufficient money, time, and interest to see it through.