UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
BBC The Repair Shop-Portuguese guitar restoration
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For any fans out there of The Repair Shop have a look at last Wednesdays episode in which I restore a 120 year old Portuguese guitar. 3 days work compressed down to 10 mins of viewing is bound to leave out quite a lot of detail. For instance, the bridge was missing on this instrument. But I was able to track down an image of a very similar guitar, made by the same maker in Porto, and copy the bridge shown on that instrument. So I was pretty confident that the replacement bridge was very similar to the original. That little story didn't make it into the final edit. But that would be true for many of the repair shown on the programme. Here's a link if you are interested.
The Repair Shop
Flame Guitars. Custom electric guitars, servicing & repairs by David Kennett
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The guy who found his adoption papers in the loft was quite a story too.
You were wondering why the logo got taken off - I wouldn't be surprised if it had something to do with licensing/support of the band from another manufacturer. I've seen lots of musicians tape the maker's name over before (there was a Christy Moore concert on a couple of months where he'd taped over the Takemine logo on his guitars) and I reckon that's probably it. You get it with sports people all the time, when they're sponsored by one manufacturer and the team has another.
Just a thought.
i love this guitars and i have build a few wen i was in Portugal, now here in UK theres no ppl playing or i dont know any
theres 3 tipes, coimbra is probably the most played at the moment, but we have lisboa and porto as well. The porto stile is very similar as the coimbra exept in the head.
wen i said very similar is not equal .
lisboa is a bigger guitar, and has some extra difilculties in building, the heel in the back is very thight and the aplication of the biding requires some extra things that are not easy to explain, but i can tell that if we cut the biding straight like for acoustics then will be really dificult to glue them in the “slot”
i hope that im not wrong but i believe that at this days you can study portuguese guitar in one university in Portugal, you can have a degree
I do wonder about some of the people and their stories on there. “It’s been a treasured family object”, but not treasured enough to get out of the loft for fifty years and paid for to be fixed apparently. I’m assuming the repairs on the program are done FOC? It does all make good tv obviously.
Yet I do find it oddly addictive, although you never really see anything go badly wrong. This was your grandmother's finest China that she treasured since 1898 that sadly got chipped by a careless child in 1953 and put away for safe keeping since. Well, we dropped it on the floor and smashed it to bits. What do you want for free? Next...