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Green Paint


charic
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[quote name='charic' post='103575' date='Dec 12 2007, 09:19 PM']Ok heres the deal i want to find a NICE metallic green for my pbass. Green being my fave colour, however these seem hard to come accross. Wondered if u had any ideas?[/quote]


Find a car colour you like... then track down the paint code?

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[quote name='warwickhunt' post='103712' date='Dec 13 2007, 09:17 AM']I've just had my Warwick sprayed with Lamboughini Muckylargo orange, supplied by car paint suppliers and applied by a luthier.[/quote]

my friend had a bogey green bass guitar which he bought on e bay for about £40. it was a westfield 5 string or something...
he sprayed it black with a green line down the fretboard. Really nice

tbh i dont think you should spray it... there are more wacky ideas ...
Syd Barret from pink floyd stuck broken mirrors to his guitar...

you could just wear a green suit instead? =D

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[quote name='warwickhunt' post='103712' date='Dec 13 2007, 09:17 AM']I've just had my Warwick sprayed with Lamboughini Muckylargo orange, supplied by car paint suppliers and applied by a luthier.[/quote]

Is it expensive to get a luthier to do that? I also want a green p-bass.

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[quote name='Alfie' post='104147' date='Dec 14 2007, 12:14 AM']Is it expensive to get a luthier to do that? I also want a green p-bass.[/quote]

It really depends on the quality of finish you desire! If you are spraying a bolt on Fender 'style' bass worth a couple hundred quid that you are going to beat the cr*p out of, then you may as well get your friendly local back street body shop to do it, probably for £50 - £100. If it is a genuine expensive article or something unusual (my bass is a Warwick with the centre neck-thru left revealed with no shouldered edges), then £200-£400 will get the job done. Prep work is what eats up the budget, so the more that you can do the better. However, do you want to spoil a good job for the sake of paying someone to do it properly. I wouldn't trust someone who knows nothing about basses to sand and prep my pride and joy but putting a belt sander to a Squire... go on then! Also consider what your local panel beater and sprayer knows about neck pockets, bolt recesses etc and go from there.

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Another option is to keep the original body as it is (or sell it) and get a brandoni alder precision body for £90.Then spray it with paint from a larger branch of halfords where they mix the paint to your requirements - last time I did this there were three large books of colours and my daughter chose a pale lilac for her musicmaster bass.

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Yeah sorry i should of thought about what i was typing :) i know how to go about getting it done. I was asking for examples of what you consider to be a nice metallic green. Altho the idea of green n black stripes on a pbass is great i reckon haha

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This is the colour bass I want.



I have a Squier P-Bass that I don't really use very much. I was thinking about getting it painted and sticking in some new pups, but is it worth it? The thing is probably worth about £100 so can I really justify spending the same again (and more) to make it look good, even though it will still have its inherent problems with high action and lack of sustain?

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[quote name='Alfie' post='105648' date='Dec 17 2007, 11:23 PM']This is the colour bass I want.



I have a Squier P-Bass that I don't really use very much. I was thinking about getting it painted and sticking in some new pups, but is it worth it? The thing is probably worth about £100 so can I really justify spending the same again (and more) to make it look good, even though it will still have its inherent problems with high action and lack of sustain?[/quote]

In short no! However, the action should be treatable... lack of sustain is trickier. Not sure without playing the bass why you have that problem. Though if the strings are a mile from the pup then you may be losing it there and/or the neck bolts aren't tensioned correctly... bridge sh*gged... body wood cr*p... tuners kapput... pup shot. I'd still not throw £10 at the aesthetics of a bass that is unplayable. Sort that first then decide.

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[quote name='Alfie' post='105648' date='Dec 17 2007, 11:23 PM']This is the colour bass I want.

I have a Squier P-Bass that I don't really use very much. I was thinking about getting it painted and sticking in some new pups, but is it worth it? The thing is probably worth about £100 so can I really justify spending the same again (and more) to make it look good, even though it will still have its inherent problems with high action and lack of sustain?[/quote]
I'd avoid it.

why not keeping an eye out for any better basses in the same color you want? :)

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[quote name='warwickhunt' post='105656' date='Dec 17 2007, 11:37 PM']In short no! However, the action should be treatable... lack of sustain is trickier. Not sure without playing the bass why you have that problem. Though if the strings are a mile from the pup then you may be losing it there and/or the neck bolts aren't tensioned correctly... bridge sh*gged... body wood cr*p... tuners kapput... pup shot. I'd still not throw £10 at the aesthetics of a bass that is unplayable. Sort that first then decide.[/quote]

Cheers for the input

I might use it for a project. I'm not going to sell it, so I might as well have a go myself. The action is much better than is was thanks to a little tweak of the truss rod, however I can't get the strings much lower at the bridge because of some pretty uneven fret wires. My best option with the action is to change the nut.

I think I will give painting it a go- there are some pretty good walk-throughs on the internet. I don't think buying a green one is an option as I have never seen a P-Bass that colour for sale. So I don't think I have anything to lose- if I balls it up, then I have ruined a bass I don't really need. If it turns out great then I have a good looking thing that is by no means unplayable- it just isn't as tempting as my other basses.

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How green are we talking?

Candy Apple Green...



Sage Green Metallic (a standard Fender MIM colour and previously available on US models, there's a MIM P on eBay at the mo)...



Surf Green...



Foam Green...



Sherwood Green Metallic...



Teal Green Metallic...



Emerald Green...



Personally I'm not a lover of green guitars but quite fancy the idea of a green flip/flop paint job. Saw a car once that had one which had an orangey-yellow as the flip colour.

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im an artist so no idea.
But if it is acrylic spray paint then look for a shop that sells to local graffiti 'artists'. Its bassed on car paint. Is a load cheaper (£3 ish for a can) comes with a range of nibs.
If it doesnt really play that well anyway see if you dont mind messing it up

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