Guildedagain
Enlightened Member
Actually looks like a pretty clean repair. This is the way things were done down on the farm. You break it, you fix it.
This is actually a common old timey musician repair, these mending plates commonly available at the hardware store down to the street from the bar where your guitar got broke the night before.
I had a '59 LP Jr. with the same repair, and the guy who bought it from me (high end dealer from Seattle who flew over to buy it at the airport in a blizzard) said it was going to be a very easy resto, much better than the funken crackhead epoxy and screw jobs we've all seen.
This is actually a common old timey musician repair, these mending plates commonly available at the hardware store down to the street from the bar where your guitar got broke the night before.
I had a '59 LP Jr. with the same repair, and the guy who bought it from me (high end dealer from Seattle who flew over to buy it at the airport in a blizzard) said it was going to be a very easy resto, much better than the funken crackhead epoxy and screw jobs we've all seen.
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