Sunday, August 30, 2009

The First Week






The first week has come and gone... What can I say?, more than anything I miss my Wife, dog ,
family and friends.,I slept late today Sunday as it is the day of rest and I need to keep up with my Studies.




Life here with Rosie is great, she makes me feel very comfortable, she is a great person and is very understanding and sweet. I could be partying it up with a bunch of 18 year old's in some run down apartment with a beer keg, I am in a beautiful, comfortable home with a surrogate dog Cody, a sweet and very old Yellow Lab that seems to be glad I am here.
I am forever grateful to Rose.

IT'S HOT, VERY HOT, DID I SAY VERY VERY? Not a day under a hundred with equal humidity, forget what they say about a dry heat. I just try to stay out of the direct sunlight and near a fan. but when we all get together in the lecture room, a lot of hot sweaty men (& two girls) well that's just plain nasty.

Lets get caught up, Monday, first day was spent getting aquainted with the different types of large woodworking machines, routers, sanders table and radial saws, thickness sanders, planers drill presses and band saws all of which could rip you to shreds, there is literally one band saw called "THE BUTCHER BOY" named by the company who made it for butchering cattle, literally a flesh an bone cutting saw! So I just keep repeating,"You are a guitar player"
I move slowly and carefully and use push sticks whenever I can. We learned how to "end match"
wood so that when you glue two pieces together, the grain at the end of final piece will be equal and opposite. (see first Photo), Templates are then traced on the to the centerline, and cut out with a bandsaw (not butcher boy), oscillating drum sanders and disk sanders do the rough sanding to get the high spots off from the bandsaw, then a a router is used to cut out the neck pocket, pick-up and controls cavitiies. Orbital Sanders take care of the front and back flat sides and then alot of hand sanding of the sides, all around till it is smooth enough to do a"round-over" on the back with a router and bit. The top is not rounded over to accommodate "binding," yet another process not addressed yet. Then more hand sanding until it "feels" right.
I will only use first name as to not incriminate, Chris ,Mat, Troy, Bob and John are the instructors so far. Very knowledgeable and very strict about saftey and proper tool use. I feel confident they will keep us all safe and help us to build great guitars.
There will be tons more sanding before we finish. We also thickness sanded our ebony fretboards, the thickness sanders spin very fast and are long steel rods wrapped with sandpaper, the idea is to run the fretboard blank through over and over while lowering the roller by small increments until the board is at a specified thickness. Everyone was cover with black Ebony dust, mixed with sweat, not pretty. An education in different type of wood preparing us for wood selection for our acoustic guitar builds, their musical properties, cost, availability and reactions to other woods on an acoustic level. We have the choice of building a Martin style OM (orchestra model) or a Dreadnaught style. I have opted to build an OM with a Western Red Cedar top and either Honduran Mahogany or Bubinga Back and sides set with a Mahogany neck. Based on my bluesy playing style I thought the warmth of the Cedar top would match well with the harder, tighter back and sides to give a good "overall" sound with the ability to be punchy when necessary. Also, I don't own an OM. We will also be designing all of own soundhole rosettes, headstock plates, fretboard inlays and binding. The electric I will build will be of the Fender-ish Telecaster type with a slab-board neck and Mahogany body. with I think, a Mahogany or Koa top plate or cap with tortoise shell binding and maybe a Bigsby tremolo, maybe not, maybe a standard Tele bridge that accommodates a humbucker in the bridge position and a mini-humbucker in the neck position. The Tele body we built during the first 3 days has an option of a 'Baritone" neck, which will essentially render it a six string bass, that plays just like a guitar with string gauges to keep it guitar-like playing.
So that is the first week. It has been as I said very hot, humid and intense. I am drawing up some headstock designs and the body shape for my electric.
BONUS! Josh and "Sleep for Sleepers" came through late last night and I got to spend an hour or so with the guys. They got a good meal, but no rest they went right on to San Diego!
Make sure to go to their Myspace and follow their progress, videos, etc.
Thanks again to all my friends back home keeping a eye on Michele-
BTW if you want to contact me by email-great, I check it about every other day, so any messages you send via Facebook will only be checked on the weekends.
This is still pretty, different, but with the undying support of God, my Rock,
Michele, my wonderful wife, my kids, Heather and Josh, all of you, my wonderful friends. I will remain headstrong in my goal. Please pray that I leave all my human ego behind, and that I stay low in the boat, listen, learn and concentrate on nothing but my studies. Thanks in advance.
Well that's it for now, off to do homework, and laundry-
God Bless you all
I miss everyone very much.
BTW the first friday I did a sit-in gig! I don't think I will have any trouble finding place to play on a limited level of course! PEACE!

Monday, August 24, 2009

First Day! CRAZY!






Well... after an unbelievable evening of fun and friends and playing some fun music with my good pals Jon and Rod, and Julian, and celebrating Mishies B-day, we finally arrived, after a long morning of travel got settled, unpacked and prepared, I finally attended the first dat at Roberto Venn! A long HOT , HUMID Day but very good as far as learning goes- mostly getting aquanted with the woodworking machines like planers and table saws etc. getting our tools squared away and meeting folks and getting aquainted with our surroundings, we finally selected wood blanks for our first guitar body which will be Telecaster style and I have opted to make it a baritone guitar (simply because I do not have one!) But that may change. So we planed, sanded and joined the wood halves (alder) glued and clamped, thickness planed after gluing, and tomorrow we will cut out the template and rout all the body cavities for pick-ups etc and will probably have a finished, body by friday or monday. Minus the actual finish, then we will prepare the rest of the guitar, make the neck, and all the other parts later next week. So it's all happening FAST. Alot of young people and two other other gents that are my age and one even older! I am beat! so I will post a couple pics and will not update till the weekend.
Some shots of RV and my workstation, far right and some machines as well as the template.
Over all a very productive day. Make sure to look at the Roberto Venn website for a little history of the joint.
http://roberto-venn.com/http://roberto-venn.com/

Monday, August 17, 2009

One week to go!

So, Final preparations are in place to get ready to go. This past weekend was spent in Wine country at the Healdsburg Guitar festival-a convention for custom guitar builders. We went to network, take a few classes, on playing, not building, and to meet a lot of cutting edge Luthiers. Some of the Better Known, Tom Ribbecke, Jeffery Yong, Kevin Ryan, Charlie Hoffman, Howard KLepper,Bryan Galloup, Kathy Winger, David Myka, Peter Marrerios, of Cornerstone Guitars,Judy and Jimmie Threat Aaron Andrews, and many,many others. also a few newcomers that I thought showed great promise. Joe Striebel, from Germay and Sugita Kenji. I also got a chance to Hang out with Wyane Charvel and his Son Michael- We all know "San Dimas" Charvel electric guitars and now Wayne is stating to do acoustics as well- His son, Michael is a guitarist and builder as well, super nice folks!

I also had an opportunity to meet, after about a five year email relationship of discussing guitars, Jeffery Yong who's Fall Line of guitars was absolutely stunning, Jeffery also deals with Malaysian Hardwoods( He is currently using "Monkey Pod" wood. He is also a luthier instructor, and has invited me to Malaysia to further my education. Ok---Malaysia...A very nice man with impeccable instruments. Jeffery and I met after I was researching someone to build my designs. It was through encouragement from Jeffery, Bob Bennedetto,Tom Ribbeke, and a few others, and of course all my friends and family that led me to the decision to go to school. Thanks to all of you. Michele and I happened to be at the right place and the right time and we got an invitation to attend a Barn Dance at Tom Ribbekes' house in Healdsburg. We enjoyed good people, cold beer and some great food with some really great, friendly people. We were thrilled to watch some of the greatest players in jazz and blues and country, play Tom's Masterclass instruments. In front of the Barn!! Always great to get a barn gig! Many people were not builders or players but professional craftsmen such as Fred Campbell, whom Michele and I talked to extensively, is widely known as the best "Finish" guy in the industry. He was actually the one responsible for us to be there.
Overall it was a great experience and opportunity to meet what I think some of the friendliest, knowledge sharing, talented and approachable people I have ever met. AND GUITARS? OH MY! I will post all my pictures on MobileME under Healdsburg Guitar Festival. Link is Below Too many to post here but be sure to check them out. We stayed in Guerneville right on the Russian River- Absolutely gorgeous in the middle of the Redwoods. Must see-a few Pics on Snapfish too.
Well,Keep checking in and those of you who know, I hope to see you all on the 21st!
at the Woodranch Bistro...
Mobile Me link for Pictures: http://gallery.me.com/scottjeffers1#100014

Friday, August 7, 2009

Busy Getting Ready




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As before, I am trying to get everything aligned to get ret to go! The re is a lot of MATH- And my daughter Heather's boyfriend is a math teacher has been kind enough to give me a tutorial, tutoring, tutelage. Funny words. Anyhoo I am very grateful, he is great guy and treats my daughter nice. The list is still pretty long, tool wise, and I think I have gotten all I can, the rest I will have to get from the school as they are rather specialized. I am constantly going over the designs for my builds, they seem to be evolving in their own. I picked out three of my favorite guitars and took measurements to apply to my new designs. I will post the pix of those. One is a long scale Epiphone Sheraton that plays great and the other is my Tele, I also love the feel of my Guild Bluesbird and am contemplating building a modern day version of a Guild Aristocrat/Bluesbird. I cant decide whether to put my design up on the blog. Let me know what you think. I guess I started this a little too soon, as I am running out of info to give. BTW Just uploaded 3 guitar shots The single guitar is the old 50's Guild Aristocrat, the two together, My Red Guild Bluesbird and then the Brown Guitar, next to the Strat is the Epiphone Sheraton. These guitars are just outstanding players with amazing tone, so there are attributes of these guitars I will try to use in my designs.
I am still requesting prayer for God to lead me through this. Thanks in advance for those and all your support.
Back at ya soon.
Scotty