Gallery

  • This guitar is probably among the first twenty Martins made in 1939 after the change in nut width on 14-fret models from 1 3/4" to 1 11/16", so yes it is 1 11/16. It has all original finish. Original tuners. Original maple bridge plate. It has multiple repaired cracks on top and sides (no cracks on back). Extensive play wear. New, but perfect, historically correct reproduction Ebony bridge.  
  • An all-original Martin from the finest era in the company’s history, this 0-18 is unsurpassed for Martin 12-fret Adirondack spruce over Mahogany tone. What can you add about a 1930 Martin, that is 100% original, down to the original bridge pins, and original ivory saddle This example is from the time when Martin had just started using belly bridges, and the ebony belly bridge on this guitar still has its original ivory saddle. And this guitar is 100% crack-free. Period. The instrument features the original bridge (full height), original tuners, original ivory saddle, original nut, and original maple bridge plate (the bridge plate shows almost no wear from ball ends–almost unheard of in a prewar Martin). All original finish– everywhere. Some honest playwear and various minor nicks and dings give the wonderfully aged and naturally honey-hued Adirondack top character. The top shows perfect form, with no bellying behind the bridge, etc. One of the things that makes Martin’s from these year so great-sounding: Martin was still using a thin ebony rod inside the neck, not a metal bar. So the instrument is more free to resonate, from tuners, right down to the bridge. And resonate this one does, with a strong bass especially that puts many many large size guitars to shame. 1-7/8 inch nut. The neck has just been set, by us, retaining the original Bar frets
  • 1963 and 1964 were the best years for the legendary early 60's Gibson SG. And 63-64 saw the transition from the Les Paul model to the "Solid Guitar" or SG. Only in 63 and 64 did Gibson use a particularly wide neck on the SG, and that's why players love SG's from these two seminal years. This '64 SG is something of a transition model from the last of the double cutaway Les Paul/SG's to the SG Standard-it carries the Les Paul truss rod cover (original to the guitar), and it features the great lyre vibrola (nickel). This 1964 SG, with all original finish, and original parts (including Patent # humbuckers), is a wonderful instrument with the right amount of honest wear to make it fit like a glove, and play like a dream in your left hand with that wonderful ample neck.
  • This stunningly beautiful, one-of-a-kind custom built resonator (from 2006, in beautiful crack-free condition and with only light wear) is from Tony Nobles, well-known luthier, and maker of instruments for Joe Walsh, Billy Gibbons and many other artists. The art deco ornamentation compliments an incredibly well built instrument, with meticulous attention to detail. Listen to/watch the video clip where guitar master Redd Volkaert put this instrument through some interesting jazz and blues paces.
    • Spun-aluminum Quartermane biscuit-style cone (single-cone resonator)
    • Solid curly maple, back top, and sides, with light tobaccoburst nitrocellulose lacquer finish
    • Art deco coverplate, soundholes, and tailpiece of antiqued brass with a metal mesh covering
    • Maple binding on body
    • Custom torch inlay on headstock
    • Curly maple neck
    • Waverly tuners
    • Scale: 24.4 inches
    • Nut width: 1 7/8 inch
    • String spacing at nut: 1 18/32
    • Bridge spacing: 2 1/8
    • Lower Bout: 14 1/2
    • Upper bout: 9 1/2
    • Body depth at bottom: 3 ¾ inches
    • Body depth at neck joint: 3-20/32
  • A wonderful, completely crack-free LG-2. The neck was recently set by Mark Erlewine, the frets dressed, and a new saddle installed ... beautifully set up by ME. 1-11/16 inch nut. Mahogany back and sides. Spruce top. Low action, with no buzzing. Nice sustain, and volume.
  • 19th century Martin parlor guitar. This lovely sounding Martin 2 1/2-17 features solid Brazilian Rosewood back and sides, Adirondack spruce top, and original Jerome tuners. This particular instrument has a beautiful, lyrical voice. It was made probably circa 1867-1870. There are several clues to establish that: the original coffin case with the guitar has attributes of an earlier case: the small brass handle, and the label inside the case has font and other attributes of late a 1860s case. Also, the particular style of the original Jerome Tuners. Kerfing inside is also indicative of an 1860’s Martin. And, the best clue of all: the 1 ¾ inch nut width. Of course, it’s post-1867, because of the “CF Martin & Co” stamps inside. The top is fan braced, typical of this style. Measurements are: body length 17 7/8", lower bout width 11 5/8", overall length 36 1/2"; scale length 24 ½ inches. 4 inch body depth at end pin; 3 3/8 inch boy depth at neck joint. 1 ¾ inch nut width– may have been a custom order, or just a slightly narrower nut width (from the 1 7/8 more common later) from the factory. 12 fret cedar neck/ebonized, with ice cream cone heel. All original finish, everywhere. A fair-to-low amount of playwear (see photos). Original bar frets in fine condition. Several small hairline cracks in back, repaired. Top and sides also have a couple or repaired cracks. Reproduction ebony bridge– just made by Dick Dubois.. Original bar frets. Original bracing. "C.F. MARTIN &CO/ NEW YORK" hot stamped on back strip inside, and heel block. CF Martin New York stamped on back, by heel joint. Original Jerome tuners, with original buttons– note, one of the sun gears (on the G string tuner) has been replaced, with a different 19th century Martin sun gear (see photo). Historical interest aside (these just-post-civil war Martin guitars are more rare than the 1870’s/1880’s/1890’s examples), this guitar plays wonderfully. It projects glassy brazilian trebles, and clear mids and bass notes. It’s just a joy to play, and it just floats in your hands (due to its very light weight). Action is good, and it plays in tune even on the higher frets. (Note: 19th century Martins can be fitted with: gut strings, classical guitar strings, or sometimes silk and steel/tuned down–depending on the guitar. It’s really a case-by-case basis. One size does not fit all. And different 19th century Martins sound better with different strings. In this case, with this particular guitar, our favorite strings if you want a “classical” style string but more brightness and volume than nylon classical strings: Savarez Alliance composite High Tension strings (note, “high tension” by classical standards– fine for this instrument). This instruments sounds wonderful with those strings. In is original coffin case (and case has all the original hardware, as well as its original cloth interior lining).
  • Out of stock
    • Cedar top
    • Depth at lower bout: 4 3/16 inches
    • Width of neck at nut: 2 inches
    • Body length: 19 3/4
  • Crack-free, and 100% original, down to the bridge pins, and the original Geib case. Just getting a neck set to make it play perfectly.
  • Probably the best year ever for 14-fret 00-18s. In the Golden Age of 14-fret Martins from the early 30's until the late 30's, only in 1936 did Martin use Brazilian rosewood (as opposed to ebony) for the fretboard and bridges of 18's, so its tone is considered by many to be the best in the 14 fret, 1-3/4 inch nut era. The guitar is crack-free on the top and back. Just one repaired crack on the treble side.The repair is well done and almost impossible to see from the outside (older repair has muslin cloth on inside-luthiers agree that these older cloth patches inside a vintage Martin should be left in place). Original tuners. Original bridge plate. Original nut. Replaced T-frets by us. Replacement bridge-very dark Brazilian rosewood bridge made to original specs in our shop, and ivory saddle. The neck has that wonderful mid-thirties slightly fatter profile. Neck set by us. And the tone is the best example of a Golden Era 00-18 you'll find anywhere. Light overspray (no refinishing) on back and sides (not top, neck or head).
  • One of the first Martin 3K Ukeleles ever made. This is possibly a prototype, one of the first, all hand-made Martin 3K Ukeleles, made probably before the official introduction of the model by Martin in 1919-1920. It has many signs that it was the one of the first ones:
    • Ebony fretboard is hand-cut
    • Fretboard inlays are hand-cut
    • There is an "A" on the back of headstock... could be a marking by the Martin craftsmen in-house to indicate a prototype.
    So it dates from about 1918– when Martin first developed the style "3K" before its launch in 1920. The "K" of course, stands for Koa (wood). It has:
    • Several cracks on back (repaired)
    • Two cracks on top (repaired)
    • There is one missing brace, a back brace, inside. Since ukeleles are so small, that brace has no real structural importance, so we decided not to replace it
    • The sound hole was at some point enlarged slightly, either at the factory, or later. Probably later– so we’ll call it the Tony Rice model… this modification does add loudness
    • The finish is all original.
    • Original striped nut
    • 3 lines inlaid down center of fingerboard.
    • 7 ply side binding
    • Celluloid ornament on top, behind bridge (known as the "parend").
    • Small pearl paired-diamond inlays at fret 5, 7, 9– hand-cut. With the “bowtie” at the 7th fret
    • Kite-shaped celluloid ornament on front of headstock
    • Original friction pegs
    • Ebony fretboard
    • C.F. Martin & Co. stamp on back of headstock.
    The tone is absolutely superb– loud, clear, bright glassy tone that only Koa gives– and this one is as light as a feather… the best tone we've heard from any ukelele. With original case.
  • A chance to own a great sounding, great playing Brazilian Rosewood D-28, at a fraction of the cost of an all-original example. This D-28 has had some work, and a few issues, but it’s all repaired and ready to play. And the tone is incredible– tone you won’t find in any other mid-50’s D-28. This guitar, has just been gone over head to end pin, repaired, restored, and set up, by two of the top luthiers/repairmen in Texas, and it’s good to go for decades. The bridge is perfect. Saddle is perfect height. Action is great– low but no buzzing. It won’t need a thing. Ready to play. The tone: the scalloped braces add roundness and clarity to the basses (A and D string in particular) and a bit more “ring” to the trebles. Don’t try this at home– a scalloped braced mid 50’s D-28, but the result, set up by two of this country’s top luthiers, is a great sounding brazilian Martin dread, whose tone you won’t find in any Martin north of 1944– certainly not at this price. Here’s the report:
    • sometime decades ago, the top braces were scalloped
    • probably as a result of a minor impact at the end pin (guitar dropped), there were cracks in the sides, and a slight crack to the neck block. So a previous luthier, long before we acquired the guitar, put in 4 small wood dowels, through the sides–near the heel, into the block (see photos). All is stable. Not the prettiest solution, but it works well.
    • Small crack in heel, repaired and stable
    • Original finish, on Sitka Spruce top; Oversprayed back, sides, and neck (but back of neck finish has worn, giving a natural, comfortable feel)
    • A bit of damage to one corner of the headstock. But there are no cracks in headstock.
    • Pickup jack installed years ago at end pin; no pickup inside; Also, an old pickup jack on bass side of guitar, filled.
    • Some pickwear loss, bottom edge of soundhole
    • Top of guitar has no serious cracks. No "B string" pickguard crack. Tiny crack along the treble edge of the pick guard. A couple more finish type of cracks that do not go through the wood to inside.
    • Several side cracks, all addressed.
    • Back of guitar has no cracks through the wood. A couple of finish cracks.
    The good news: recently, the following work was done on the guitar, making it 100% stable, and ready to play:
    • neck set, by John Allison
    • Refret, by John Allison
    • New, 100% period correct, ebony bridge, made and installed by John Allison. Bridge is made to the exact specs, footprint, etc, of an original 1956 Martin bridge. A small area of finish around an older oversized bridge was addressed by John (you can see this in the photos).
    • New, period correct Maple bridge plate, installed by Tony Nobles
    • Old pickup jack on bass side of guitar, filled by Tony Nobles.
    • The wonderful, original gold-plated Kluson waffle-back tuners, are original, and work perfectly.
    • Original pickguard
    • Original Martin logo on headstock
  • Another Gibson L-00, with great tone and volume, and all original finish. The top and sides are completely crack-free, and there are several small dryness cracks on the back. The bridge is original, and has never been off the guitar. We just set the neck, and installed a new bone saddle. The bridge plate is original and in perfect condition. Original firestripe pickguard. Original nut. Original frets.
  • This new, custom made Lester Devoe Flamenco Negra is amasterpiece, from one of the world’s top luthiers. Lester Devoe needs nointroduction to the world’s great Flamenco players. The late, legendary Sabicasplayed a Devoe– and converted some of the great Flamenco players in Spain tothe fold. Paco De Lucia, and Vicente Amigo, among others, play Devoe Flamencoguitars. Paco De Lucia began playing a Devoe Negra guitar years ago– and thereare many Paco De Lucia recordings and feature films where Paco plays a DevoeFlamenco guitar.) This is the second custom guitar, that Lester has made for uswith select, old growth, quartersawn AAAAA Brazilian rosewood. Signed by LesterDevoe, 2012 (March).
    • 650mm scale length
    • Nut: 52mm
    • Neck width at nut: 52mm
    • 80 year old Brazilian Rosewood (pre-CITES) back and sides (Quartersawn).
    • European spruce top
    • Cedar neck
    • Brazilian Rosewood headstock overlay, and bridge
    • Brazilian Rosewood body binding, top and back
    • Ebony fingerboard
    • Sloane tuners
    • Nitrocellulose lacquer finish
    Tone is superb, the tone only old growth Brazilian imparts. To hear an audio clip (audio/video clip) of this guitar, click on the icon below the photo on left. In this clip, Michael Gratovichplays Joaquin Turina's Sonata op. 61 (Third Movement), on a Granados guitar(first 1/3 of this clip), and a Lester Devoe Flamenco Negra guitar (the last2/3 of this clip). We specifically chose this guitarist, and this piece ofmusic, to demonstrate how the Devoe Brazilian Rosewood Negra captures thenuances of more delicate passages, not just the bolder more flamenco-like runs.Recorded in stereo with Miktek C5 Small Diaphram Condensor Microphones (MatchedPair).
  • When Martin entered into its “Golden Age” for the flat top guitar, the jazz guitar was evolving on a parallel and equally important track. And in Europe, especially France, they had their own ideas about guitar making, and produced some brilliant guitars in this era–including of course the wonderful Selmer gypsy jazz guitar. The brothers Gerome were among the best luthiers in Mirecourt, France, a city famous in Europe for producing the finest gypsy and jazz guitars, in the 20s, 30s, and 40s. This all original, gypsy style guitar has maple back and sides, to give that high, twangy tone, just what you want in a django-style guitar. This one has loud piercing trebles–the treble strings are louder and more piercing than any guitar of any kind I have ever heard. Only maple produces that loud sharp treble. The volume of this instrument is striking, and there is almost a “reverb”, resonant quality to the tone. Solid spruce top. Black & white checkerboard marquetry binding on top, and rosette. It has a very thick rosewood fingerboard (over 4/10 inches/10.5mm thick!) Maple neck. Nut just shy of 1 7/8 inch. Wonderful bakelite buttons on the tuners. And it would not be a genuine gypsy jazz classic, if it did not have the hallmarks of this style: the original “floating bridge”–not an “adjustable brigde” for height, but a floating rosewood bridge that is not glued to the top, but held on by string tension (the “wings” of the bridge are glued to the top in this configuration). (You can of course change the intonation with this set-up.) The other feature that is a must, is the “zero fret”, i.e. there is a fret (the “zero” fret) right in front of the nut. 14-5/8 inch wide at lower bout. All original finish. A couple of small cracks on top. Top center seam repair. Original T-frets show wear, but still work fine. No buzzing. Action is good. Takes loop-end strings (available from many sources–Savarez Argentine strings are great on this instrument).
  • Late 1970s, but in almost unplayed condition. Bluegrass banjo players seek out these 70’s Whyte Eagles, known for their tone and craftsmanship. It was a pretty short window of only about five years, when these banjos were made with this kind of craftsmanship. They blow away most any banjo made and marketed (from any country) in the 60s, 70s and 80s– and they show no logos on headstock– just beautiful mother of pearl. It’s the No. 4310 “Whyte Eagle”. Based on late 1920’s Vega Griffin (Tubaphone #9) style inlays, with engraved, carved heel. Sunburst finish maple banjo, Gibson-style 2 piece flange, full height 20 hole archtop tone ring, dual coordinator rods, flamed maple resonator, maple neck, chrome finish. Neck is butterfly with ebony strip on back of neck, down the center. Just set up, with new tailpiece, and new head, by Dave Trexle and ready to play: loud, clear, and bright. With original hard shell case.  
  • Very Nice Brazilian Rosewood D-28 dreadnaught.
    • All original finish, bridge, bridge plate, tuners
    • Newer saddle and nut, just installed to give perfect action, tone
    • Original Tortoise pickguard
    • Original small maple bridge plate, great condition
    • Typical small “pickguard crack” as almost vintage Martins with pickguards have. It was professionally closed/glued years ago, stable and no longer an issue. There is a 4 2/3 inch finish crack, with 2 inches or so of that just barely visible from inside– located from edge of lower bout up, about 3 inches to the treble side of the center seam… professionally closed/glued years ago, stable and not an issue now
    • Brazilian Rosewood back and sides: crack-free
    • 100% original finish, everywhere. No overspray or finish alterations of any kind. Minor dings and some minor pickwear around the soundhole.
    • Has never had a strap lug attached to the wood of the heel itself. There is a strap lug attached to the ivoroid heel cap.
    • Original frets are in great condition…  just a bit of wear, on frets 1-3/B string only
    • Action is great– low and fast and loud, and neck angle is fine. Plenty of saddle left.
    • Typical crazing of finish on top and back as seen on almost all mid-60s Martins (finish is all original, everywhere)
    A fine Brazilian rosewood D-28. Set up perfectly and ready to play. Tone is exceptional– for any decade vintage D-28. I’d put this D-28 up against any late 40’s or 50’s D-28 for tone, volume, and string separation.
  • This model is something of a sleeper on the Golden Era Martin guitar market, because there are just not that many pre-1939 00-17s available. There are quite a few war-time and post-war 00-17s, but a 00-17 with full pre-war specs, forward shifted X-bracing, and 1 3/4 inch nut, is hard to come by–and they have all the great qualities of 00-sized Golden Era Martins that cost twice or three times the price on the vintage market–for now, as these great pre-war 00-17s will catch up quickly. The tone and volume of this 00-17 is astounding: full, amazingly bright, and with impressive volume. 1-3/4 inch nut width. Crack-free except for a well-repaired crack on bass side, about 2 inches long, that's difficult to see even up close. No cracks at all on top, or back. All original finish. Original bridge plate. This model has of course a mahogany top as well as mahogany back and sides. And with that dark look and original gloss finish that really sets this Golden Age Martin apart in its own class. Neck has the typically slightly beefier profile that's the hallmark of the best 30's 14-fret Martins. Neck was set by us. Replaced, period-correct Brazilian rosewood bridge. Original ebony nut. All new T-frets installed by us. Original tuners.
  • A pre-decal Uke from Martin. Style 0, with no body binding. Well worn, but 100% crack free.
  • This guitar is the last known guitar in existence, made by Louis Schmidt, the famous contemporary and one-time colleague to the founder of Martin Guitars, the original C.F. Martin. As such, it is a rare example of early American guitar making. And it’s signed by the maker, on the underside of the Adirondack top: Louis Schmidt Wakefield Westchester Cy NY July 9th 1859 U.S. Louis Schmidt worked side by side with CF Martin in the early years. Perhaps the most common misconception about early American guitar history is that C. F. Martin spent his first years in America earning a living as a solitary luthier in his New York workshop. Pay ledgers reveal that as early as 1834 he was paying luthiers to help him make his guitars. Two of these men, Heinrich Schatz and Louis Schmidt, left Martin's employ to make guitars on their own, and each succeeded as top builders. This instrument:
    • Similar features to circa 1860 Martin 17 style... but different purfling, binding, and slightly different body shape
    • All original finish
    • Brazilian rosewood back and sides (solid); Adirondack top
    • In its original coffin case
    • 11 3/8 inches wide at lower bout (a bit larger than a Martin 2 1/2)
    • Body: 3 7/8 inches deep
    • Original mahogany bridge plate (goes almost all the way across the width of the top, slotted under all the braces)
    • Fan bracing pattern
    • Plays beautifully. Good bass tone. Action is perfect.
    • Ebony Bridge has been off at some point, and reglued on. With a lack of similar guitars on the market, it’s not known if this 19th century bridge on the instrument is the original bridge.
    • One repaired crack on top, from bridge to bottom binding; One repaired crack on back. One small crack on top, either top edge of soundhole.
    • Original Jerome tuners, reverse gear, working perfectly
    • Maple and rosewood purfling/binding on top (no binding on back)
    According to all known writings and records about Louis Schmidt in existence prior to the discovery of this guitar, Schmidt was supposed to have "disappeared from the scene in 1858”. This newly surfaced guitar, the last one we know of from his hand, proves otherwise, and is a great example, still in its original case, of the work of this well known and important early American luthier.
  • Nothing sounds like a 30’s Gibson L-00. No longer a sleeper on the vintage guitar market–they are sought after by working musicians the world over¬–they are still under-rated on the collector market. These mid-size Gibsons are incredibly resonant. There is nothing like them, from Gibson, and the mid-size Adirondack spruce over mahogany Martins from the mid to late 30’s command more than twice the price. This L-00 from 1938 has the best tone of any of the 30’s L-00’s we’ve seen. You won’t believe its presence. Acquired by us from the family of the original owner in Austin, Texas, this guitar is a great example of the era when Gibson still had a production jump on Martin, and even its lower cost guitars were winning the marketing war at the trailing end of the depression. This L-00 had a re-spray of its burst in the early 60’s, so while not the original finish, it’s got the right look and feel of the 30’s, and plenty of mileage to make it more than convincing. The top and sides are completely crack-free, and there are only two small cracks on the back. One is not through the wood, and the other was expertly addressed by Tony Nobles with a small cleat. Tony also made a new perfect reproduction Brazilian Rosewood bridge. The bridge plate is original and in great condition. Original firestripe pickguard. Original nut. The non-original tuners on the instrument when we acquired it were replaced by us with klusons from the period. Tony also installed new T-frets. While we tend to specialize in vintage Martins, this one might change my mind.
  • Exquisite, and a joy to play (… the top level, largest guitar that Martin made at the turn of the 20th century– with tone that shows off what Frank Henry Martin was proud of when he personally signed the inside of this instrument in April, 1903…)
  • This fine Brazilian Rosewood 12-fret Martin is a joy to play, and it’s properly set up for steel strings. The grandson of C. F. Martin, Sr., Frank Henry Martin oversaw the Martin business from 1880 until well into twentieth century, and was responsible for the creation of the Style 0. I’m sure he loved this guitar–he personally signed the instrument, in cursive, under the top: “# 10082 Oct. 17th, 1905 F.H.M.”   This 0-21 combines the exquisite tone of a 100 year old Martin, with some wonderful restoration. Guitar was refinished, probably decades ago, and it is a beautiful, French polish finish that has all the earmarks of an original finish. You can see the pores and saw marks in the Brazilian rosewood. No heavy-handed finish here, it’s a natural finish that lets the grain and color of the wood come through. And the tone, too, that sweet tone you can only get from Brazilian this old. The ebony pyramid bridge is a replacement, and features a compensated saddle, so intonation is dead on. (The bridge plate is the original small maple plate, in perfect condition.) Original tuners. Crack-free top and sides. There is only one very small crack, on the back, about 3 inches long, professionally repaired. The neck was set recently by Tony Nobles, and the original bar frets dressed. It plays, and sounds, like a late 20’s 12-fret Brazilian rosewood Martin.
  • This 1922 Bacon & Day Serenader, tenor banjo is in great original condition. The well-worn head can be easily replaced– we retained it for originality. The banjo shows little wear. And all the parts are original–Tailpiece, tuners, dowel, everything. This is a golden era B&D, not one of the later 30s/40's banjos that are more common. In this condition it is rare. And it comes in its original hard shell case. Price: $1695.
  • This historically significant Gibson L-1, 12-fret flat top guitar, is the earliest true Gibson flat top guitar on the market today.  As well as the one in the best, original condition. And it is a rare example, exhibiting transitional features that place it just barely after the 1926 introduction– yet still a 1926 model (Factory order number: 8406)– but leaning toward a few subsequent, very early changes that would establish Gibson on the flat top scene that Martin had carved out so well. Introduced in '26 (there was already a L-1 archtop), the original Gibson L-1 flat top had a 13-1/2" body, wide V-neck, and H-bracing. The L-1 later achieved fame due to its association with the legendary bluesman Robert Johnson. Its rounded lower bout, combined with narrow waist, is distinctive. And its thin braces, thin finish, and thin woods give it a wonderful woody yet loud, cutting, bluesy tone that no 1930’s– much less more modern– Gibson or Martin could achieve. It is the transitional nature of this particular guitar, that is intriguing. The very first L-1 flat top, had an arched back (birch, or maple), and a pretty fat V-shaped neck. Other traits of the very first L-1 flat top: single bound top; maple back and sides; no truss rod; unbound ebony fingerboard; H pattern top bracing; “The Gibson” paint logo straight across peghead; light amber top finish; Sheraton brown finish on back and sides; single bound back. But this L-1, though very early, does not have arched back, but rather a true flat top-style back. And its neck is a great-playing C shape, not overly fat, and not a V shape. Furthermore, it has “A” bracing, not the standard H bracing. Finally, this guitar has a (original) ebony fretboard with virtually no radius. It’s a true “transition” example. It is notably not a hybrid put together from old L-1 archtop parts– as were the very first L-1 “flat tops” out of the gate in 1926. These are the traits of this early Gibson L-1 flat top:
    • Single bound, red spruce top, with amber stain
    • Original ebony bridge; original cellulose bridge pins (unslotted)
    • Maple back and sides (back is not arched), with Sheraton brown finish
    • Mahogany neck, C-shaped
    • Original, very thin maple bridge plate, tucked under braces, and extending all the way to the kerfing at the sides of the top, and tucked under the Kerfing
    • No truss rod
    • Unbound ebony fingerboard (not “ebonized”, but solid ebony)
    • “The Gibson” paint logo straight across peghead
    • Single bound (ivoroid) top
    • Single bound (ivoroid) back
    • H bracing (a slight variation of  “A” bracing; with the apex at either side of the neck block– and the braces actually tuck beneath the neck block)
    • Pearl dots on 5,7, and 9 frets
    • Original three-on-a-plate tuners, with plastic tuner buttons
    • Original frets
    • Original ebony nut
    • 13 5/8 inch, lower bout
    • 24 1/2 inch scale (not the 25 inch scale that was soon settled on by Gibson for the L-1, soon after the introduction)
    • Nut width: just shy of 1 7/8 inch
    • Width of fretboard at 12th fret: 2 ¼ inch
    • String spacing at nut: a hair over 1 ½ inch
    • String spacing at bridge: 2 3/8 inch
    • Three well-repaired top cracks  (all, with the grain; and the amber finish on top is very forgiving, in terms of appearance, so cracks are hardly visible)
    • One replaced tuner post
    Every part of this guitar is original, except a new saddle, and the one replaced tuner post. Even the bridge pins are original. The neck was just set by us, perfectly. Intonation is perfect, all the way up to the high frets. Action: 3/32 over 4/32 inch (high E; low E, at 12 fret). This guitar is a rare example of the first true Gibson flat top, and is the earliest made on the market that is indeed a true Gibson flat top– not a hybrid Gibson archtop/flat top. If you acquire this guitar, you’ll have boasting rights to the first Gibson flat top still in existence. But that’s all for show. More than anything, this guitar plays beautifully. It’s hard to put down. Its tone is wonderful. It has clear, glassy trebles that only the combination of maple back and sides with the very thin build, can deliver. This is a guitar whose trebles and mids you will not find on any other instrument. It is a combination of that uncompromised, pure woody tone from the great 20’s flat tops, but with the clear, louder trebles and mids that are haunting, and fill the room, even with the lightest touch.