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Refinishing a Guild Starfire / f hole painting


kristo
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Hello all. I’ve got a couple of the new Guild Starfire 1 basses that I have absolutely fallen for in terms of what I need in a bass. My only wish was that one could be in a natural blonde finish. Does anyone know if it’s possible to refinish one, maybe by sanding the finish and using some sort of light wood stain? And would it be a costly process if someone could do it? Cheers. 

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Edited by kristo
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Forget about it!

 

Stain is designed to work on unfinished wood. To make it work on a previously finished surface, you would have to ensure that every bit of the old stuff is removed. That includes stuff that's sunk into the wood. Any wood that is not completely stripped will in effect have a partial seal that the stain will not sink into. You end up with a patchy ugly finish.

 

The top is almost certainly plywood. To strip the existing finish completely, there is every chance that the top layer will be sanded through. You end up with a patchy ugly finish.

 

 

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John Lennon managed to remove the sunburst finish off his casino and clearcoat it to a natural finish—allthough he probably didn't do the work himself.

 

If you were to try this on one of the guilds you'd want to do it to the brown one which is laminated maple rather than the red one which is lovely as it is and is laminated mahogany. I don't know how the modern finish would compare to John's 60's finish. I imagine (no pun intended) his casino would have had a thin nitro finish that might have come off with a wipe of lacquer thinner.

 

Alternatively you could sell one and add some cash to get a natural flamed maple starfire II. I have one and it is phenomenal with the bisonic pickups.

Edited by Jean-Luc Pickguard
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Thanks for the replies, I'm not intending to do it myself, I just wondered if it might work. I didn't know John Lennon did a similar thing, I assumed his Casino was the original finish. I messaged my local luthier last night and he said it might be possible to strip one and use a dull French polish to get a natural finish....   

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11 hours ago, Jean-Luc Pickguard said:

Alternatively you could sell one and add some cash to get a natural flamed maple starfire II. I have one and it is phenomenal with the bisonic pickups.

 

I did have a Starfire II in the past, but I find these ones a little more compact and playable.

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On 13/09/2022 at 22:03, Jean-Luc Pickguard said:

Alternatively you could sell one and add some cash to get a natural flamed maple starfire II. I have one and it is phenomenal with the bisonic pickups

This ^

 

Bear in mind that pretty much any mod reduces the resale value, however well it's done.

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That's true, maybe I'm just thinking of doing it for the sake of it....

 

Looking at the basses last night, I think I'd be happier if the f holes could be more prominent, like on a Gretsch. Has anyone tried using pen paint on the inside edge of an f hole to make it stand out more?  

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  • kristo changed the title to Refinishing a Guild Starfire / f hole painting
3 hours ago, kristo said:

That's true, maybe I'm just thinking of doing it for the sake of it....

 

Looking at the basses last night, I think I'd be happier if the f holes could be more prominent, like on a Gretsch. Has anyone tried using pen paint on the inside edge of an f hole to make it stand out more?  

Well, if it was my own bass, I wouldn't.  And I know that's rich when I mod most of my own guitars and basses and even my website is called ajrguitarmods.co.uk 9_9      :lol:

 

But it's such a pretty model of bass straight out of the box - and even doing that small change would reduce the resale value.

 

 

But it's not my bass and there's no such thing as 'you mustn't'  :)

 

 

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