I have only made 4 guitars but have made my own purflings for 3 of them and it has worked well. The main learnings for me were:
- when gluing the veneer sheets together, complete even coverage is important. I did not do a good job the first time, so when bending the purflings on a hot pipe, the layers started to come apart. I use a credit card to spread titebond. I then clamp the veneer sandwich between 2 sheets of 3/4" ply.
- to cut the veneers, I use a veneer blade on my sawbench - I use the same blade for cutting fret slots. I glue a thin straight edge to the edge of the veneer sandwich (see pic below) which I can then hold against the sawbench fence. I also place a heavy length of wood on the veneer sandwich close to the blade to keep it flat to the bench. I just keep moving my fence 3-4 mm on each cut. I use these purflings for the thin rings in/outside the main rosette as well as adjacent to binding.
Attachment:
Purfling.JPG
- I also make my own wood bindings. If I want purfling below the binding on the soundbox sides, before cutting the binding strips, I glue the veneer sandwich to the top of the wood to be used for bindings, so that when the bindings are cut, those purflings are already attached.
Frank