old nitrocellulose finish on a guitar
I have an old Maton slimline electric guitar in a black and green sunburst lacquer finish. It has a few chips and scratches and is bare to the wood in some spots, and also the lacquer is crazing slightly. I do not want to strip the instrument, just repair the damage as much as possible, and restore the finish as much as possible. I would be most grateful for any suggestions. I have had some self taught experience in repairing old violin finishes(spirit varnish, oil varnish, shelac etc ) but have never done any work on lacquer.
My sincere thanks, in advance, if anyone can advise me
You might want to give this a go...
Yes, I was referring to nitrocellulose lacquer.
Yes, it should be compatible, and you should be able to frennch polish on the nitrocellulose lacquer.
You first need to dewax and clean the finish, you can do this with white spirits and some clean cloth, keep wiping until the clothes are clean.
You could try increasing the alcohol (meths) in the french polish and work in circles this may remove the crazing in the coating, once the crazing is out, if it comes out, then pad in the conventional method. Do this on a small area to see it you can get it to work.
To try repaiiring the defects you might want to try filling the defects by using a small brush and dripping in the shellac and slightly over fill the defects, then allow the meths to evaporate and harden. Then with a sanding block and sandpaper level the dry shellac. You might want to do your coloring and graining before you do the filling. Then the French Polish can be used to pad over the defects and blend in the damages and the guitar.
Do some practicing in a small area until you get the feel.
Good Luck
Thanks for your concern Astrid
The Guitar is not particularly valuable ( a few hundred dollars maybe). I am aware of the concerns about old instruments, so I will be proceeding with caution. Thanks for your comment.
Rod