paint thinner or a whole lot of sanding when re-painting the guitar and its perfect make sure to use wood finish like polyurethane. Read the warning labels on it as well. lots of videos on YouTube to help with it
It depends on what spraypaint you use. You have to use a special guitar paint. But it's not safe to use regular paint.
Dip it in pink paint. // Depending on how professional of a look you are going for, you can either buy pink spray-paint (or some other type of paint) and paint it yourself, or you can turn it into a guitar shop and ask them to give you a custom design. Be aware though, of the fact that you have to remove all the electrical components of the guitar (if it is an electric or semi-acoustic guitar) before re-painting it in the colour of your choice. It is only the so-called 'body' of the guitar that is to be re-painted! Another way is that, before you buy a guitar, you could try and speak to the guitar makers. More times than not, you are able to close a deal in which you (for an extra sum of money) receive your guitar in whatever design you favor.
A music man bass electric guitar is made of the standard materials. They differ, but are mainly made of wood, metal, strings, wax, paint, and a little bit of magic.
Because he wanted to.
Any kind of paint marker. I drew a bunch of graffeti on my guitar and it didn't hurt the paint job any,and it's stayed on there for quite awhile now.
It depends on what spraypaint you use. You have to use a special guitar paint. But it's not safe to use regular paint.
Dip it in pink paint. // Depending on how professional of a look you are going for, you can either buy pink spray-paint (or some other type of paint) and paint it yourself, or you can turn it into a guitar shop and ask them to give you a custom design. Be aware though, of the fact that you have to remove all the electrical components of the guitar (if it is an electric or semi-acoustic guitar) before re-painting it in the colour of your choice. It is only the so-called 'body' of the guitar that is to be re-painted! Another way is that, before you buy a guitar, you could try and speak to the guitar makers. More times than not, you are able to close a deal in which you (for an extra sum of money) receive your guitar in whatever design you favor.
Studio electric guitars are usually a little cheaper than their normal counterparts, because the idea is that a studio electric guitar is stripped of visual things, like fancy paint jobs and fretboard inlays, where as the normal verson of the same guitar, with the same parts, might have more visual things added, for stage presence for instance.
First, remove any paint or other finishes. Use sandpaper, electric sander, and paint scrapers.
a circular body like a banjo with one single coil pickup and one volume knob the neck resembled what a stereotypical classical guitar looks like with dot inlays. The guitar had no paint on it. it was nicknamed the frying pan guitar that rickenbacker made
1) Remove all pickups, pick-guards, knobs, machine heads etc. and detatch the neck from the body (where possible) To remove the pickups you will need to solder the wires off the knobs- these will have tp be replaced later so take a photo/ draw diagrams so you will know where they need to go back 2) sand down eveywhere you will be painting. If you have an electric sander great but if not this will take you a long time. Many people say that you need to remove all the paint from the layer below until you rach the bare wood but i have never found this necesary. Just sand down until you have some texture on the guitar so the finish is not shiny 3) Spray the guitar the desired colour using spray paint. To get the best finish keep the can at least 60cm away from the guitar and spray in shory bursts in a sideways motion, covering a whole strip across the body. 4) allow to dry and repaint. 5) re-attaxh everything you removed 6) you're good to go!
This not advisable because it can seriously affect the tone of your guitar.
yes but it will look rubbish
No. Electric paint buffers are used to quickly repair a car's finish.
Paint thinner will remove it.
You don't remove it. You have to paint over it.
I think,it is completely remove paint and lubricants from metal , easily remove, low expensive