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Hi Jeff, Glad to see that pickguard came off without too much of a fight. Here's an article by Dan Erlewine about coloring a pickguard. Your's probably lost color from the solvent/adhesive or outgassing (by any chance were the frets over the body really discolored?).
You should be able to put some color back on the underside of the pickguard. This is preferable to even an exact replacement, and don't expect that expensive Gibson part to be exact.
http://www.stewmac.com/tsarchive/ts0088.html
Joshua
Jeff,
The first photo in your original post definitely indicates out-gassing effects on the frets.
Personally, I'd recommend replacing the pickguard. It's only going to get worse....MUCH worse.
Just order a thin tortoiseshell blank, use the original as a tracing template, cut it with a craft or utility knife and use the 3M pickguard adhesive tape to affix it to the guitar. It's about a 1 hour job including smoothing & polishing the PG's edges.
Good luck
Jeff,
Paul is right on the the money. It WILL just get worse. The problem is the old solvents used in manufacturing, keep 'evaporating' out. After tracing and cutting the new one, lightly sand the sharp edges, and affix it to the sound board.
Explain this to your customer.... it's the only, and best way to do this task. YOU are the repair tech, NOT your customer.
I'm a bit late to this party, but what I see in the photo looks like finish delaminating from the pickguard.
It happens sometimes when the guard is flexed on removal, and it often occurs with intact guards, where the finish is crazed.
You can often leak under some cellosolve to readhere the finish, scrape all the finish off and polish the plastic, or drop fill and level the area with new lacquer.
Here is where I get mine;
http://www.chemical-supermarket.com/product.php?productid=191
Be very careful... highly flamable! (BOOM!)
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