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CMF design uses metadesign logic, the simultaneous planning of the identity of entire ranges of products for a given brand.This makes it possible, for example, to adopt a single color matrix, instead of using a series of separate and different color cards for each line of products, as previously done.
The Custom has a three-piece maple neck and ebony fingerboard. The Custom was available in white finish, as well as ebony. The most common finishes were (in order): ebony, white, burgundy, silverburst and solid-color silver. Less than 100 (by factory record) solid-color silver units were produced, making it the rarest of the Sonex models.
Polaris white, Cherry red, Various Sunbursts and custom finishes The Epiphone Wilshire is a solid body electric guitar made by Epiphone from 1959 to 1970. [ 1 ] After Epiphone was acquired by Gibson in 1957, this was one of the many models produced to rival the very popular Fender Stratocaster. [ 2 ]
The 1954 Les Paul Custom also saw the introduction of Gibson's new bridge, the ABR-1. [4] The new Custom also shipped with a different case from the Standard, using a black and gold case instead of the brown and pink case that was the top-of-the-line case for the Les Paul Standard models.
A Fender Stevie Ray Vaughan Signature Stratocaster electric guitar in a three-color sunburst finish. Sunburst is a style of finishing for musical instruments such as electric and acoustic guitars and electric basses. At the center of a sunburst-finished surface is an area of lighter color (often showing the wood grain underneath) that darkens ...
The Gibson Flying V is an electric guitar model that was originally introduced by Gibson in 1958. The Flying V offered a brand new, radical, "futuristic" body design, much like its siblings: the Explorer, which was released the same year, and the Moderne, which was designed in 1957 but not released until 1982.
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