Friday, 18 March 2011

Vintage Guitar - Should You Sell It?

By Carmella Hoffert


Vintage guitars are exceptionally favored, carefully created, older guitar instruments manufactured year 1920s and early 1970s. Guitars that are constructed before 1920 aren't generally regarded as collectibles due to the fact that they don't have a similar playmanship. Guitars constructed following the year 1972 also don't have as much valuation as a result of bulk production, automated production types of procedures, and also loss in all round quality. Some of the most antique guitars were produced in the 50s and 60s.

Vintage guitars continue to grow more priceless with age instead of less. For example, the 1971 Gibson SG Deluxe with electric hard body is a vintage guitar instrument for its premium quality as well as a brief run and few volumes unlike the Regular Edition. You will recognize the SG Deluxe by its mother of pearl block inlays across the fret board, a tremolo bar, and also the Tune-O-Matic bridge. Most versions were made in a cherry wood or mahogany finish, creating the unusual walnut finish worth much more. A 1971 Gibson SG Deluxe walnut finish guitar instrument in excellent condition would sell up to 1,900 US dollars - a price which is almost certainly going to go higher over time rather than decrease.

Guitar instruments that were preferred by widely known guitarists could also play into the mystique and hence cost of a vintage guitar. Jimi Hendrix emblazoned the Fender Stratocaster not just into the hearts and minds of a generation, but into heritage itself forever fusing it with rock legend. There are numerous designs of Fender Stratocaster at this time but only the more costly models are made in America while entry level versions you can get today are Mexico made. Older Fender Stratocaster from the 60s are classic vintage guitar instruments.

More recent guitars usually are released in limited editions under the name of a rock legend, similar to Eric Clapton's series by Fender. These guitars possess distinctive hardware or even a trademark design, yet they are not likely to become one of vintage guitars, not in the classic sense at least. Production line manufacturing takes some of the "soul" of modern guitar instruments. They just don't have the same feel to the the person collecting as older hand-crafted guitars. Still, collectors born today may have varying viewpoints in the coming years. Keep the vintage guitar for a few decades more and see. A guitar that is generations old, appears to be new, and was excellent quality to start with might be regarded as vintage subsequently. But the more of them you can find available in the market, the lower the price they will get.

With regards to steel string acoustic guitars, nearly all older Martins are viewed as vintage with different values attached with it according to the model and present condition. Classical guitars and bass guitars have their own vintage models too. The classical Carlo Robelli acoustic guitar and the Robelli's Matsumoko bass guitar also are deemed vintages.

Normally, the better a guitar has been stored, the higher it's price, though this is not always the case. Extreme use from heavy playing on a very old guitar can add 'character' and a sense of historical past to the guitar instrument. Yet, wear from use is not the same as wear from misuse. A guitar that has been abused and neglected will show the wrong kind of wear which will result to a much lower worth.

A lot of guitar retailers that sell modern guitars also sell rare guitars and will also pay cash for an antique, although the vendor will only receive about half the worth or a even less if drawn in trade-in value for a different guitar or store credit. If you're trying to sell the guitar through classified ad like craigslist, make sure to have all the attributes on the listing that make the guitar vintage, then wait for that customer that recognizes its worth. Better yet, hang on to it. In thirty more years it might be worth a fortune and you'll be thankful you've kept it. Maybe you'll even start playing it once more.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment