[clicks lights on]
Welp... everything is about where I left it in here. There is a nice layer of dust and cobwebs in the windowsills. But the COVID-crazy season is drawing down at work, I now have three full-time Operator trainees. So I'm going home at a reasonable hour and even having a few more weekends off. All this means... I can start using these rusty marbles rattling around in my head for repairing musical instruments again instead of spending day and night solving the problems of running three Water Treatment Plants.
Don't get me wrong, I love this new mentorship role teaching my kids... and I got three good ones too. I'm just young enough to remember what Operator training was like, but old enough that none of them were born when I started this gig. Releif has come. It's been a tough couple years, but I'm hoping to finish out my time doing this.
The Scroll Shop is back open, at least on a limited basis.
I'm already working on a couple things. The most advanced project right now; Honeytone #22-28. The first new construction in over ten years. The neck, me and Dad had laminated up years ago. It's a cherry beam, with walnut and maple pinstripes. I just glued up new headstock faces on the front and back the other night, rosewood on the front with a maple underside (creates a thin white pinstripe) and a cherry veneer on the reverse, simply to hide the "ears" glue joint. Inlay was done years ago but I may redo it. It was cut from recycled ivory piano keys if you're curious. What ever I do, the headstock inlay will match up, and have our trademark honeybee inlaid into the scroll.
This'll be an open-back 5-string, modeled on turn-of-the-(last)-century styling, but brought forward in a few ways. Spoken-for already.
Pictorial updates are coming.