Because you asked...
You won't find a much bigger krazee on these boards than me for vintage Alembica - ask Mica. My custom fretless bass is a weird-o-rama melding of vintage touches, curves and patterns, middle-era (20th Anniversary and Persuader), and modern ideas, and... my own nutty personality, all built into one bass. I even had them put the battery compartment between the pickups, like a pre-1974 bass. Hadn't been done since '74... they had to make a jig to do it. I know they thought I was nuts. We're all a little bit nuts.
Think this through... you already have the idea of what it looks like; Standard Omega, zebrawood top and back on a mahogany core. You've chosen a commonly seen, proven tried-and-true neck layup from the 70's. And you know it's a Series 1. That's your bass, right there... the rest is expression and ergonomics. The headstock is already going to draw attention with the omega-cut. Will an inlaid logo show up against the zebrawood veneer... sure, it's just about how to choose the right piece. Like Rob suggested, some nice slab-cut zebra is a thing of beauty. And when it comes to choosing a piece of wood, just trust Mica and Susan on that stuff. They are both freakishly telepathic at knowing how these things will look finished out. I asked for a birdseye maple top and back, nothing crazy, just a classic look. The first look I got at it, it had already been made into a bass, and I was floored. It was a marbled figure with a thousand little birdseyes looking back. I asked for a contrasting cocobolo headstock veneer. I didn't see it for almost two years, but when I did, it had just a little peek of birdseye figure in it too. Yeah - they
meant to do that.
https://club.alembic.com/index.php?topic=22859.0 (plenty of pictures here, if you want ideas...)
You are about to have 2,000 decisions to make. Breathe in. Take your time. And nevermind the lightshow.