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Rosewood back- this ok?

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TINMAN82TINMAN82 Frets: 1844
edited December 2021 in Acoustics
I know wood availability is dwindling etc, just wanted opinion re whether this EI rosewood back is acceptable on a fairly high end acoustic. Won’t mention make/ model etc in case it affects the answers!

To me aesthetics are fine. Clearly the grain widens considerably in the middle and the colour lightens, which might be seen as lower grade. Grain generally quite straight though and reasonable bookmatching. I’d have thought no major concerns. Anyone disagree?


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  • AKAIK the colour of the EIR has no bearing on the quality, IMO it looks excellent, great quality book matched quartersawn straight grain rosewood.

    Btw, a lot of rosewood/mahogany we see in finished form has been treated with wood dye, so it will look darker than it naturally is.
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  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    AKAIK the colour of the EIR has no bearing on the quality, IMO it looks excellent, great quality book matched quartersawn straight grain rosewood.

    Btw, a lot of rosewood/mahogany we see in finished form has been treated with wood dye, so it will look darker than it naturally is.
    this
    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
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  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    I can't see what it is that would even raise the question. What about it could be not acceptable?

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

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  • MellishMellish Frets: 945
    Looks fine to me. Sure, I care about looks but tone comes first for me. If it looks a million bucks but the tone sucks, you're not going to play it, right, so what would be the point of having it? :) 
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  • TINMAN82TINMAN82 Frets: 1844
    ICBM said:
    I can't see what it is that would even raise the question. What about it could be not acceptable?
    I was reading a little into wood quality and grain. There are some strong views around wrt light vs dark, heartwood vs sapwood, straight vs wavy, wild grain etc etc. 

    I guess I’m also wondering if now is the time to pick up that “life companion” acoustic made of all solid premium woods.

    It just struck me that this rosewood back looked quite orange and grainy in the centre..,and could that be a sign of poor/ immature timbre. Could be the lighting I guess as it’s a professional/ shop photo.
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  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    TINMAN82 said:

    Could be the lighting I guess as it’s a professional/ shop photo.
    That's a professional photo?! What does an unprofessional one look like? :)

    It's completely out of focus, or such poor resolution that blowing it up looks like that.

    That said, the shop I work for has a similarly appalling approach to photos for the website...

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

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  • TINMAN82 said:
    ICBM said:
    I can't see what it is that would even raise the question. What about it could be not acceptable?
    I was reading a little into wood quality and grain. There are some strong views around wrt light vs dark, heartwood vs sapwood, straight vs wavy, wild grain etc etc. 

    I guess I’m also wondering if now is the time to pick up that “life companion” acoustic made of all solid premium woods.

    It just struck me that this rosewood back looked quite orange and grainy in the centre..,and could that be a sign of poor/ immature timbre. Could be the lighting I guess as it’s a professional/ shop photo.
    Some of the best EIR is orange and grainy. Have a look at the Martin Forum and keep an eye for 70's Martins, there are quite a lot that look like the one you posted. 

    Some wild grain EIR, is flat sawn, that stuff is more likely to crack in the long run than the straight grain wood. When it comes to the wavy stuff, some of it is quartersawn nonetheless.

    Indian Rosewood is one of the most consistent materials out there.  Of course there are some stinkers but it's down to other factors, not the back and sides.

    Is it the right time to pick up the life companion acoustic guitar? YES.

    There are other factors I'd see to be more important, eg character (be it modern like a Taylor or traditional like a Martin), shape, bracing, string spacing, neck profile and so on.
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  • TINMAN82TINMAN82 Frets: 1844
    TINMAN82 said:
    ICBM said:
    I can't see what it is that would even raise the question. What about it could be not acceptable?
    I was reading a little into wood quality and grain. There are some strong views around wrt light vs dark, heartwood vs sapwood, straight vs wavy, wild grain etc etc. 

    I guess I’m also wondering if now is the time to pick up that “life companion” acoustic made of all solid premium woods.

    It just struck me that this rosewood back looked quite orange and grainy in the centre..,and could that be a sign of poor/ immature timbre. Could be the lighting I guess as it’s a professional/ shop photo.
    Some of the best EIR is orange and grainy. Have a look at the Martin Forum and keep an eye for 70's Martins, there are quite a lot that look like the one you posted. 

    Some wild grain EIR, is flat sawn, that stuff is more likely to crack in the long run than the straight grain wood. When it comes to the wavy stuff, some of it is quartersawn nonetheless.

    Indian Rosewood is one of the most consistent materials out there.  Of course there are some stinkers but it's down to other factors, not the back and sides.

    Is it the right time to pick up the life companion acoustic guitar? YES.

    There are other factors I'd see to be more important, eg character (be it modern like a Taylor or traditional like a Martin), shape, bracing, string spacing, neck profile and so on.
    Appreciate your insights, thanks.
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  • TINMAN82TINMAN82 Frets: 1844
    @earwighoney just googled 70s Martin as per your suggestion and this was one of the first things to pop up on eBay! Orange grain eat your heart out.




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  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    Yep, a very professional photo, taken by a professional. :) Not sure what sort of professional, maybe a professional storeman or a professional shop assistant. 
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  • That looks like a lovely piece of wood. Don't see why the OP was concerned ?
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  • boogiemanboogieman Frets: 11742
    Tannin said:
    Yep, a very professional photo, taken by a professional. :) Not sure what sort of professional, maybe a professional storeman or a professional shop assistant. 
    Imgur knocks the image quality down quite a bit. It might’ve been a reasonable photo to start with. 
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  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    Not that much.
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  • I was reading a little into wood quality and grain. There are some strong views around wrt light vs dark, heartwood vs sapwood, straight vs wavy, wild grain etc ”

    Yeah that group with the strong opinions that’s the same group blindfolded that can’t tell EIR from Brazilian, stork margarine from butter or a Stradivari from a Chinese replicas. 

    All things make a difference but wood colour and grain will not make much of an audible difference   if at all,  more important will be shape, the quality of the top the makers bracing are they good at building guitars etc etc .
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  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    TINMAN82 said:
    @earwighoney just googled 70s Martin as per your suggestion and this was one of the first things to pop up on eBay! Orange grain eat your heart out.
    I'm guessing Martin as well :).

    My '71 D12-35 looks pretty much like that. Or it would, if it didn't have a massive piece of contrasting wood in the middle :).

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

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  • TINMAN82 said:
    I know wood availability is dwindling etc, just wanted opinion re whether this EI rosewood back is acceptable on a fairly high end acoustic. Won’t mention make/ model etc in case it affects the answers!

    To me aesthetics are fine. Clearly the grain widens considerably in the middle and the colour lightens, which might be seen as lower grade. Grain generally quite straight though and reasonable bookmatching. I’d have thought no major concerns. Anyone disagree?


    If it sounds good and plays nice I honestly wouldn't think twice about the appearance of the back. 
    In the same manner that I don't wonder how the under carriage of my car looks when it's on the road
    The Bigsby was the first successful design of what is now called a whammy bar or tremolo arm, although vibrato is the technically correct term for the musical effect it produces. In standard usage, tremolo is a rapid fluctuation of the volume of a note, while vibrato is a fluctuation in pitch. The origin of this nonstandard usage of the term by electric guitarists is attributed to Leo Fender, who also used the term “vibrato” to refer to what is really a tremolo effect.
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  • TINMAN82TINMAN82 Frets: 1844
    TINMAN82 said:
    I know wood availability is dwindling etc, just wanted opinion re whether this EI rosewood back is acceptable on a fairly high end acoustic. Won’t mention make/ model etc in case it affects the answers!

    To me aesthetics are fine. Clearly the grain widens considerably in the middle and the colour lightens, which might be seen as lower grade. Grain generally quite straight though and reasonable bookmatching. I’d have thought no major concerns. Anyone disagree?


    If it sounds good and plays nice I honestly wouldn't think twice about the appearance of the back. 
    In the same manner that I don't wonder how the under carriage of my car looks when it's on the road
    Agreed. It’s just that common wisdom does suggest there may be objective clues as to the quality/ maturity of timber, hence my question. Seems there’s no cause for concern.
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  • sev112sev112 Frets: 2457
    Given the effort that manufacturers put into the visual  quality of the back of many acoustic guitars, it occurs to me that they should be hung back to front.  I find the front of most acoustics to be particularly boring, but the backs very pretty normally
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  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    edited December 2021
    sev112 said:
     I find the front of most acoustics to be particularly boring, but the backs very pretty normally
    have some red gum 

    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
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  • bertie said:
    some red gum...
    I'm guessing (based on another Brook I once knew) that it used to be a lot more red!
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  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    edited December 2021
    bertie said:
    some red gum...
    I'm guessing (based on another Brook I once knew) that it used to be a lot more red!
    nope,  they do vary  -  that was the best of what Simon had in at the time - the pic is from when I got it - 2008 it is a little more red in real life,  I know they can add a wash of some kind to enhance the natural colour before the lacquer coats  - but mine isnt

    you're not Stuart R, are you ?   
    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
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  • bertie said:
    bertie said:
    some red gum...
    I'm guessing (based on another Brook I once knew) that it used to be a lot more red!
    nope,  they do vary  -  that was the best of what Simon had in at the time - the pic is from when I got it - 2008 it is a little more red in real life,  I know they can add a wash of some kind to enhance the natural colour before the lacquer coats  - but mine isnt

    you're not Stuart R, are you ?   
    A friend had one for quite a while a few years back...I do recall quite a bit of fade from the vivid streaks that it started out with.

    I'm not Stuart R...he's 'stuartryanmusic' on here ;)
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  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    A friend had one for quite a while a few years back...I do recall quite a bit of fade from the vivid streaks that it started out with.


    I'm not Stuart R...he's 'stuartryanmusic' on here ;)

    ahaa - no mines not faded at all - it is and has been kept in its case - whether that's helped I dont know - it was never very vivid, not sure Id have gone for something tooooooooo red
    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
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  • DannyPDannyP Frets: 1521
    edited December 2021
    For reference this is my Harley Benton.




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  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    bertie said:
    sev112 said:
     I find the front of most acoustics to be particularly boring, but the backs very pretty normally
    have some red gum 

    Red Gum? Really? Eucalyptus cameldulensis? It's a  very odd colour for Red Gum. Red Gum is usually ... well ... red! (Usually, not always. It does vary, but this one is so far from the average that I wonder about it. Mind you, although I've seen a lot of Red Gum over the years, it's mostly been while cutting it up for firewood. Red Gum tends to be very heavy, fine-grained, and quite brittle. Making a guitar out of it, I imagine you'd have to choose the particular bit very carefully.) No matter: it looks fantastic, a really lovely instrument.

    @sev112 you are right! Of course, nearly all of the favoured top timbers are plain to the point of being boring - they are favoured because they are strong, stiff, and light, not because of how they look - where many of the favoured back and sides timbers are favoured for other reasons - not least because they are tough enough to stand up to dings. There are a few back and sides timbers which go well as tops (mahogany, Blackwood, Koa), though with a different character. But it is  very uncommon to make a top out of rosewood, Rock Maple, Queensland Maple - or (thank God)  that awful plastic Ovation backs are made from.

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  • TINMAN82TINMAN82 Frets: 1844
    DannyP said:
    For reference this is my Harley Benton.




    Not sure a laminated veneer is a good comparison… but it is very attractive.
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  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    edited December 2021
    Tannin said:
    Red Gum? Really?
    Eucalyptus cameldulensis? It's a  very odd colour for Red Gum. Red Gum is usually ... well ... red! (Usually, not always. It does vary,

    much like ebony isnt always.............black     - most red gum back/sides Ive seen are very similar to mine,  with the only darker/redder parts a "flame" or partial -

    for instance here - the outer parts and sides are the same as mine, the inner much paler, with only the "stripes" being distinctly redder

    like this 
    Tannin said:

    Red Gum tends to be very heavy, fine-grained, and quite brittle. Making a guitar out of it, I imagine you'd have to choose the particular bit very carefully.)
    much like Ziricote Ive been told (well the heavy and brittle) , but they still do  - red gum really isnt uncommon 
    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
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  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    ^ Interesting Bertie. Red Gum is known as a back and side material here, of course, but is very seldom used. Eucalyptus in general isn't popular as a tonewood, neither of the major manufacturers use it at all and not many independent luthiers (though I'm sure most of them would have a go with it if commissioned). Red Gum is used less  than Mountain Ash and probably one or two other eucalypts.

    (More broadly, Red Gum is traditionally used for underfloor stumps, fence posts, bridge supports and marine piers, railway sleepers, and of course firewood. It is too brittle to make a good structural timber. These days, most of those uses have largely disappeared, partly because of the increased availability of concrete, partly because too much red gum swamp country has been cleared and turned into grazing land.)

    Actually, the obvious musical use for Red Gum is for fingerboards. Hard, fine-grained (oddball examples above excepted), long-wearing and stable. You'd think it would be ideal. Taylor use dyed Tasmanian Blue Gum for fretboards, which is another odd choice. The main reason for using that species rather than the more sensible-seeming Spotted Gum or Red Gum is apparently that Blue Gums grow as weeds in California. Far enough: "use what you've got" is a sensible philosophy.
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  • DannyPDannyP Frets: 1521
    TINMAN82 said:
    DannyP said:

    Not sure a laminated veneer is a good comparison… but it is very attractive.
    Yes @TINMAN82 I was just being cheeky  :3 

    I suspect you could get 15 - 20 of these guitars for the price of the instruments we're talking about!

    Solid top and great sound and playability though!
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  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    edited December 2021
    @Tannin ;;    (cant be bothered to keep  nesting quotes, looks horrid)

    not sure Ive seen RG used for fretboards,  but certainly Brook isnt the only "small" luthier that uses / offers it  -  my first choice was actually Tasmanian Blackwood,  but they didnt have any and supply was short at the time I ordered it

    Ive got a leccy with a ziricote neck and f/board - but it is a little bit neck heavy (suede strap required !!) even tho it does look and feel amazing  -

    I think for us "retired" and now bedroom players  its OK - not sure how durable it would be on a gigging acoustic.........
    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
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