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Tony, read my post again. I never wrote I do not want to discuss spirit varnishes, or that Martin never used a spirit varnish. Don't be a stranger, don't be rude either… I am only saying that two Martins from 1927 I worked on had a "simple" shellac finish, pretty thin compared to today's standards, but too thick to have been French-polished. Whereas Martin briefly switched to a spirit varnish, or used it on more expensive models I do not know. I am not a "specialist". I can only describe what I know. BTW I wouldn't consider Martin from the '20 as being "old craftsmen", it was a factory, pure and simple. I have no idea what the Larson brothers used, or Howe-Orme or other early 20th century makers as I never held those guitars in my hands. Oil varnishes were still used at the end of the 19th century by some luthiers, there's a full recipe in Heron-Allen's book and precise tips on how to apply the finish. It is a wonderful book. Factories and makers switched to the much faster drying, easier to handle, cut-production time spirit varnishes for obvious reasons. Yes there are (were) hard spirit varnishes, my French violin from 1890 was finished with one. It is crazed but not brittle like nitro would be and has a lot of totally worn patches, down to the ground coat. It also cured for 118 years… The thread is Andrew inquiring about violin varnishes for guitars. IMO the requirements are totally different. I'm trying to steer him away from it so he doesn't waste his time. What's available out there as violin spirit varnishes simply won't work satisfactorily on a guitar. When I say too soft I mean too soft, really. As Barry pointed out a violin with worn patches is common fare, a guitar not so. As a matter of fact 99% of modern violin makers sell their new violins "antiqued" because you can't sell a violin looking new to a classical musician. It looks "wrong". In the guitar world it's pretty much the opposite: a brand new expensive guitar with a tiny scratch will not do. Now, if you have a spirit varnish brand suitable for a guitar that is hard enough and resists abrasion you want to recommend… If you do not mind spending the time explaining the process for your spirit varnish in a new post I am totally interested, as others would be, no doubt.
_________________ Laurent Brondel West Paris, Maine - USA http://www.laurentbrondel.com/
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