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GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Unique Instruments II

Even more custom-built, handmade, and oddball gear from Premier Guitar readers.

Robert Calsetta's Black Mesa Guitars Signature Custom
"Calsetta's Black Mesa is his first ever custom guitar, and he says, ""I'm in love!"" It features a one-piece chambered swamp ash body, bookmatched burl maple top with matched headstock and trussrod cover, 24-fret 5-piece curly maple and jatoba neck, birdseye maple fingerboard, and TremKing trem system and locking tuners. The guitar has custom Sheptone Tele pickups with Volume, 3-way blend, blend on/off, and tone controls. He adds that the guitar only weighs 6 pounds, 10 ounces."

Have your own unique piece of gear? Send pictures and description to rebecca@premierguitar.com for inclusion in our next gallery! Click here to check out Unique Instruments I.

The SM4 Home Recording Microphone is designed to be a versatile, large-diaphragm condenser microphone engineered for at-home and studio recording of both vocals and instruments.

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The Hi/Low footswitch is designed to provide a gain boost with an EQ shift for tight tones.

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A radical and classic silhouetterevs it up for a low ride on the Sunset Strip.

Lightweight. Versatile pickups. Many sounds for a relatively low price.

Fairly noisy pickups. Uneven taper in the tone control. Lowest action is still relatively high.

$599

Danelectro Red Hot Longhorn
danelectro.com

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Danelectros are go-to instruments for guitarists and bassists out to evoke the effortless, lo-fi cool of the 1960s. And for years, Danelectro’s unconventional styling, inexpensive Masonite-and-poplar body construction, and abundance in secondhand shops made them a favorite of garage musicians—or just those with little cash to spare. As a bonus, the unmistakable twang and clarity of Danelectro’s lipstick pickups made them sound fantastic. But as adventurous-looking as they could be, no Danelectro made as much visual impact, or had a signature sound, quite like the original Longhorn.

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Big guitar-building workshops keep it clean, and so can you!

Developing good, clean workshop practices will help you save time and money.

Who doesn’t like a sweet, sustaining, saturated guitar sound? I know I do, but I also love a clear and full clean tone maybe even more. Dirty or clean, to me a guitar sounds like a million bucks when the tubes are glowing and the playing flows. But most of the time I’m in the workshop making lots of dirt, and I don’t mean the overdriven amplifier kind. Making guitars can be a dirty business. Carving wood, plastic, and steel into a majestic instrument creates a lot of mess, and eventually you have to sweep your way clear.

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