If it wears off cream one's are fairly cheap off ebay.
https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Cream-ST...wAAOxye5BRFGQ0
The one's I got were a tad 'orange' so took to them with sandpaper and rounded the edges.
cheers, Mark.
If it wears off cream one's are fairly cheap off ebay.
https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Cream-ST...wAAOxye5BRFGQ0
The one's I got were a tad 'orange' so took to them with sandpaper and rounded the edges.
cheers, Mark.
The pickup covers I've sprayed have held up fine. One set was done roughly two years ago, the other set over 12 months.If it wears off cream one's are fairly cheap off ebay.
They've both been played regularly (and hard) but I never hit the pickups when strumming or picking.
Don't how I'd go with a pickguard though... after all they are often called a "scratchplate" for good reason
However, I used Krylon which is an acrylic and formulated for applying to plastic, so maybe that helps.
In the infamous words of Pauline Hanson, "please explain?"The one's I got were a tad 'orange' so took to them with sandpaper and rounded the edges.
How did sanding the edges make them less orange?
Last edited by McCreed; 23-07-2020 at 07:00 AM.
Making the world a better place; one guitar at a time...
So they were like a melting moment, the cream was in the middle![]()
Making the world a better place; one guitar at a time...
Knocking it back from polished will have increased the amount of random light scattering and made it look whiter. Just like when you sand back a clear finish. The orangeyness is still there, just disguised. Which is all that really matters.