I love window shopping for guitars. Going into shops is great but I don't like doing that unless I'm considering buying one.
So I shop on-line. I don't mind burning a few of someone's electrons to look at all the stuff they make. Hey, what else do you do on a cold winter night when you've had your dinner, surfed The Fretboard, and played as much guitar as you can manage in one sitting?
But the very best sort of on-line window shopping is those places with a guitar designer. So far as I know, Lakewood was the first, and is still by far the best. Emerald have got one up and it's quite good too. I haven't been able to find any others yet, but there must be a few around.
Let's see if I can link to an actual design. First Lakewood .... nope. At least not exactly. you can link to the guitar designer with a base model loaded, but the link does not include your modifications. So here -
https://www.lakewood-guitars.co.uk/designer/designer.php?lakey=2.0-1659521222-j-1-1-0-06-12-01-02-02-02-02-17-05-05-01-05-03-02-01-01-03-12-02-01-02-02-02-02-01-01-01-01-12-68-03-09-02-01-01-01-01-01-02-01 - is the starting point. (Be patient, it takes a while to load.)
* Cutaway jumbo, 14-fret neck
* AAA European Spruce top, Indian Rosewood back and sides, Cedro (Spanish Cedar) neck, ebony bridge and fingerboard.
* LR Baggs Anthem.
* Lots of other stuff I won't list here, such as tuners, headstock type, neck carve and width, binding, purfling, and so on.
£3000
You can see it all on-screen, in 3d. You can zoom it, spin it around to any angle, and all your changes update on-screen so you can *see* them.
Today I chose a cedar top and French Walnut back and sides (an awesomely good looking wood!), no cutaway, Ziracote fretboard and bridge, a 46mm nut, thicker neck carve still in a C shape, no front fret markers, and different tuner buttons. Despite the expensive French Walnut back and the rather pricey Ziracote trim, the cost comes down to £2765 because I save on the things I don't need - pickup, fretboard markers, and cutaway - and it looks bloody lovely. Reckon it would play well too. Or maybe I could have the spruce after all ... click, click ... there it is! All sorts of other things to play with if you want. I love this game.
Here is the Emerald one.
https://emeraldguitars.com/3d-guitar-builder/PS: and although I frequently burn some of Lakewood's electrons without buying anything, who knows? One of these days I might just push the button
Comments
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
(But why buy one at all? One reason is the X20-7 which looks like a corker of an idea. The other reason is for travel and outdoor use. I go outback a lot - rain, desert heat, tropical humidity, frost, we get the lot - obviously can't subject a good wooden instrument to any of that, and have plenty of room in the car for a full-size guitar, so something like an Emerald X-20 might be the very thing. I don't think they have the same sound quality as a good tradition guitar, but they are far from disgraced - see here for a really well-done Emerald vs Martin vs Taylor comparison. Bloody expensive things though.)
I dont call this bad taste at all >>>>>
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
They are, of course, best-known known for their plugged-in sound - by all reports they are an outstanding stage guitar - but I neither know nor care about that. I'm a pure acoustic player. I've played two Cole Clarks that I really loved, and still rather regret only buying the first of them. The second - an all-Blackwood Angel 2 - was in the shop for about a week. When I went back to have another look at it, it was gone already. Just as well, really.
I've recently been through a phase of not liking mine as much anymore, and even vaguely thought about selling it. Last month I replaced the strings with a set of those Galli LS I liked so much on it last year and all of a sudden it is my most-played and most-loved guitar again. It is very quiet by acoustic guitar standards, has more treble than most, and tends to sound cheap and boxy if you strum it too hard (it is a small guitar after all) - but fingerpicked, it is a gem. It has a wonderful string-to-string balance and warmth, and you can push it hard without complaint. When I get lost playing and lose track of time ... well, I can do that on any guitar if it is a good day, but of late it's mostly been on that little Cole Clark Angel. I'm in love again.
As for the Emeralds, that's the point of the guitar designer - you can actually make an Emerald look ... well, not exactly good, but at least fairly unobjectionable.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
Personally I think you can design in quite a lot of attractiveness using the website designer feature. Some of the carbon fibre colours are themselves very nice looking.
Not tempted enough to by one though. Expensive + I have no specific need for another large acoustic. But I like the idea of not using wood, and the Emerald was, to me, a very attractive instrument in its own right. If the Emerald had had a distinctive tone of its own though (say like Ovations do) I might have been more tempted. But it didn't particularly. Just a nice cleverly constructed instrument.
Take a look at the regular YouTube video they do of guitars they have made and sold recently.
Shipping Video 24/06/2022 | Custom Carbon Fiber Guitars - YouTube
As for you, @DavidR all I can say is thank all the saints that Emeralds don't sound like Ovations!
(Yes, I do understand that some people actually like the sound of Ovation guitars. I just don't understand why!)
I've never tried one - never seen one in the flesh - but I get the strangest feeling that I'd love to own one
here's the top line.................................
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
And then there were three.