Boogie Bill said:What makes the Les Paul Custom model the choice of so many of today's young Metal devotees?
Monty-Jay said:Yep, but ya gotta wax pot them if you use a metal cover.
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MJ
fretburner said:Hhhhmmm... those fretboards don't seem to be dark enough to be ebony?
jmh151 said:Sometimes Ebony doesn't show up that black in pictures. Ebony isn't always jet black, sometimes it's a little lighter, like what you see in those pictures. Some manufacturers dye the ebony to ensure they have a jet black color. There's no grain showing on those pictures that would hint it's rosewood, so from my experience it's Ebony.
fretburner said:i don't know if this is ebony?
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jmh151 said:Two things. One, the wood is too grainy to be ebony. Ebony is SMOOTH. That looks like Rosewood that was stained to look like Ebony.
Second, that's not a Gibson. The inlays are not real pearl, they're plastic pearloid. It could be any imported copy- Edwards, Epiphone, Tokai, etc...
jmh151 said:Two things. One, the wood is too grainy to be ebony. Ebony is SMOOTH. That looks like Rosewood that was stained to look like Ebony.
Second, that's not a Gibson. The inlays are not real pearl, they're plastic pearloid. It could be any imported copy- Edwards, Epiphone, Tokai, etc...
jmh151 said:Sometimes Ebony doesn't show up that black in pictures. Ebony isn't always jet black, sometimes it's a little lighter, like what you see in those pictures. Some manufacturers dye the ebony to ensure they have a jet black color. There's no grain showing on those pictures that would hint it's rosewood, so from my experience it's Ebony.
My suspicion is because ESP has made fake Les Pauls and Strats in the past. I have a 1986 Les Paul Custom that I refinished, and there's something not right about the purple headstock, particularly when I see inlay sets and Les Paul Custom headstock stickers popping up on e-bay. The Les Paul Custom headstock is difficult to refinish because of the black fibre, so if you do refinish, you leave the original laquer on the headstock which would yellow with time, as you see on the Black one. It's very odd to refinish a Les Paul with yellow "aged" binding" and see that the headstock inlays are not aged as well. I think the purple one is an ESP copy made for Hetfield.
Maybe I'm just being too suspicious
FretFire said:Maybe it's just creme binding, which can look pretty yellow if it catches the light just right in a photo.
jmh151 said:No, I don't think so. Standards and Classics have cream binding. Customs have always had the black and pure white multi layer binding. The Nitro laquer yellows with age, and what you're left with is the look of Hetfield Black Les Paul Custom.
That's also why a pure alpine white Les Paul Custom yellows into the antique white. The original Gibson Zakk Wylde Les Pauls were alpine white. Then the Epiphones came out Zakk wanted them to match the yellowed look of his original bullseye Les Paul, so the finish was yellowed. I've heard that the more recent Gibson Bullseye Les Pauls have been yellowed as well.
Gearjoneser said:This is the best guitar I own. The playability and tone are second to none. C-5/59n/59n gold.
FretFire said:My Dad has a '78 Custom that's black with creme binding and gold hardware, and I saw a Custom hanging in a shop last week in the same color scheme.