Lsl Instruments / 52.5 Aged T-Bone / Various / Guitar For Sale

Exclusive of applicable tax/duties (VAT) to EU countries

The 52.5 Aged Guitars come standard with the following specs:

Lightweight, Handmade Swamp Ash Bodies
Fully Hand-Made, "C" Profile Maple Necks with Walnut Skunk Strip
Vintage Style Fender or Joe Barden Bridge with 3, Brass Saddles
7.25 Radius Maple Fingerboard
All NC Lacquer, Hand-Rubbed, Butterscotch or 3-Tone Sunburst Finishes
Lacquered, Bakelite, Hand-Made, 5-Screw Pickguard
Incredible, Sayoko Kuwabara Custom, Hand-Wound, Vintage Style Pickups
Vintage Style Kluson Tuners
Medium-High 6105 Frets
All Metal Parts are Manually Aged For a Truly Incomparable Vintage Look and Feel
Each guitar\'s fingetboard is manually worn based on photographs of actual vintage instruments. Edges are hand rounded for that silky-smooth feel.
Vintage style, slot-head screws are used on the pickguards, control plate, tuners and string tree. Phillips head screws are used elsewhere.
Vintage style, hand-made truss-rods
Each instrument is individually relic\'ed, set-up, signed and numbered by Lance Lerman.
Dome Knobs
CTS Pots

LSL Guitars are available at California Vintage Guitars & Amps, at Truetone Music or through us directly here on VintageandRare.com

Due to constant changes in mood, and an undying drive to improve our instruments, specifications are subject to changes without notice.

Price: USD 2100.00 / approx. €1620.00
 

LSL Instruments, USA  

Contact Seller
Contact name:
Lance Lerman
Brands:
LSL Instruments
Languages:
English, Spanish, Chinese, Hebrew, Japanese
Specialties:
Handbuilt Guitars
Opening hours:
10 am to 7 pm
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The story of LsL Instruments is a story of guitars. Guitars that made a business, not the other way around. This company was made by the guitars, it was always the instruments themselves.

Back at the end of 2007 I returned from about eight years of working in China. I built and ran large woodworking factories there. I lived in Shanghai for four years and in Dongguan for another four. In Dongguan I ran Pine Development, a company with about 500 employees making furniture and kitchen cabinets which were exported to the US and around the world. I was also playing a lot of music at night in a few bands. Though I was making a living it just wasn't enough to keep going so I left Dongguan and came back to the US with every intention of finding another position in China. I was planning on getting a job with a larger US based company where I could make a better living than I had been. After eight years in China and about 25 years of woodworking factory management I figured I could do better with a larger company. After all, all my friends there in Dongguan were making much more than I was. And being away from my family without making enough to warrant it wasn't working out.

 

There's a lot of music happening in China but still, its hard to find decent gear there. So every time I returned to the US, I would spend a lot of time in music stores stocking up on gear to take back with me. I was going to get myself a vintage guitar this time. I found one on Ebay - a '73 Telecaster. Not my favorite but all I could afford what with being unemployed and all. It was a great deal and I bought it. But, being a newbie on Ebay, I wired the money. There was no guitar and I was ripped off completely.

I had started my woodworking career in the guitar business. I worked for Saga Musical Instruments and was in fact their first employee. There I had to setup and play every instrument before shipping it. After a while I began doing minor repairs. Soon I was doing repairs at The Fifth String in Berkeley, Ca. where I was also teaching banjo. Then me and my partner Joe Deetz opened D&L Instruments where we started making guitars, banjos and mandolins. We could make the instruments but knew nothing whatsoever about running a business. Joe left to go back to Massachusetts and I continued until a burglary cleaned me out and ended that endeavor.

So I knew how to make guitars.  After the Ebay ripoff, I decided to make my own in my garage shop. I had been frequenting a local guitar shop, California Vintage Guitar and Amp and I asked them if I could measure a '52 Tele they had there. They agreed and I spent hours doing exactly that. I told my friend who worked there, a great guitarist named Tommy Kay,  what I was up to and he said "Well if you ever get it done, bring it by and I'll take a look." So after a few months I got it done and I thought it was an incredible guitar. But, you don't get to this age without gaining a little perspective. I thought it was a great guitar but I also knew that I really, really wanted to believe it to be. Maybe it was just me. So I brought the guitar down to meet Tommy at Cal Vintage. Tommy knows guitar and he's not one to pull punches so I knew I'd get the straight skinny from him. He played it and asked me " You made this?" "Yes, I made it" I said. You made the body?"

"Yes I did"

"You made the neck?"

"Yes, I made everything except the bridge, tuners and some of the other metal parts, but I made the truss-rod too"

"I'm blown away!" Tommy said.

And here's the sentence that started LsL:

"Can you make another?"

You can guess the answer. The first one I built for sale sold in two hours. And, 800 guitars later we continue making them, and better all the time. 

A few months later a friend of mine recommended a guy to me who wanted to make guitars. He was willing for work for free just to learn. So I "hired" Avi Shabat, our first employee. Avi is still doing all the final assembly and setup on all LsL guitars and he is a master at it.

Our finisher is Robie Canlas. He was hired to help us move from the house into our current building. That was going to be a two-day job but after we moved I taught him how to finish our guitars. He has now finished over 800 guitars with Nitrocellulose lacquer and he also has mastered his craft.

 After about the eighth guitar I started to name them with female names. And I have to say that naming the little darlings was a wonderful thing to do. It gives the guitars an identity that a serial number never could. I know where certain guitars are, who plays them and we refer to them by name around the shop. It just feels better. So we still name them. Its just a little more challenging these days.

Now LsL Instruments is in a 4400 sq ft shop in Van Nuys, Ca. We employ ten people and we finish about two guitars per day. They are all darlings and we love them all. I will never forget that spending money on a guitar is not easy for most of us. This all started because I couldn't afford one myself. So if I'm going to ask someone to buy one of our instruments it better be worth it. Our motto here is "Never sell a guitar you don't want to keep." We stand by that motto with every guitar we make.

 

LSL Instruments

15111 Keswick St

Van Nuys, CA 91405

818-785-1111

 

 

LSL Guitars are available at California Vintage Guitars & Amps, at Truetone Music or through us directly here on VintageandRare.com

Due to constant changes in mood, and an undying drive to improve our instruments, specifications are subject to changes without notice.

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