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Hi Andrew,
Not an uncommon early days mistake - I still measure twice, thrice and then dry fit all components - high anxiety is where I like to be when drilling holes in expensive pieces of wood.
Your dying looks fine and that is a worth piece of wood. one of the steps I carry out from time to time is sand off all the dye so that only the dye left in the stripes is visible and hit it again with a same strength dye and rub it vigorously - this makes the stripes darker and contrasts better.
With your dilemma here there are a couple of things you may wish to consider,but none of them are "silver bullets".
Firstly you may try darkening up the dye till its practically black and then rubbing the surface to get some contrast back in and then finishing with a dark lacquer shaders - just remember, the finish schedule is built for being hit with a couple of stage cans - and the new ones are hi-intensity white LEDs - these really cut through even the darkest shaders coats. So your goofs may not be visible under normal light and nobody is going to see them while on stage.
Secondly, in the cabinet makers bible there is a section titled "how to make a feature out of a fork-up" - so Dye the whole thing as black as and hit it with dark shaders and spruik it as the "new anti-bling" trend towards dark mean guitars that have understated figure and don't look like coffee tables or the inside of a pimp-mobile Bentley.
Thirdly, Inlay a black powder coated brass base plate that covers the goofs and inset your ferrules into it and advertise it as a "custom built bridge stabilizing sustain plate" guaranteed to improve your tone and acoustic coupling to the exquisitely figured AAAAAAAA+ maple top........ - the old Yamaha RG's had a big lump of brass under the bridge just as I described (or was it the Ibanez Artist -) and you could also leverage that as" a heavy resonant brass bridge support is custom fitted at no extra cost"....you get the drift.
Fourthly, make up a shiny black plastic decoration plate with pointy bits that matches the design "look" of the guitar and place it under the bridge area as a feature decoration.
All these things may get you over the line whereas selling it with exposed goofs or evident mistakes is just going to lose money outright. Good luck Andrew and welcome to the "I wish I had taken my time and measured and checked" club. I feel like I may be a founding member. We are at vancecustomguitars.com if you want to see where we are going with the anti-bling theme.
Rusty
Russell
I love where you are going with your guitar designs. I am not an electric guy, but if I was looking for one I would go for exactly that. I hope this venture goes well for you.
cheers
Mark
Bob Ross would easily turn this into a happy accident! I still don't see a flaw unless it's the circular indentations !
I think I'd make a slightly larger plate aligned with the humbucker hole and, as Russell suggested, with curlyques like the guitar body. I also like his idea of an black brass plate inlaid into the top. You can cut brass with a bandsaw and it's easy to file and sand. I'm thinking 1/8" brass bar:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/1-8-x-2-x-6-long-brass-flat-bar-stock-/3509...
I haven't used this but here's one way to blacken brass:
http://www.knifekits.com/vcom/product_info.php?products_id=287
Just my opinion so consider the source ;-)
I think that what you have in the last picture looks great....
Agree, perhaps a matching material ring for the selector switch would make it thematic and more like it was intended to be that way. Robbies ideas are what is possible but if your inlay skills are sus: keep it simple is good. Looks fine, Rusty.
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