c.1920 Oscar Schmidt "Parlor" Guitar
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This guitar was made by Oscar Schmidt out of Jersey City, NJ around 1920-25. It's all-solid birch throughout with a misc. hardwood fretboard (really can't tell because of the ebonization) and replacement bridge made of ebony.
These Oscar Schmidts (under names like Stella and Sovereign) are super popular with country-blues and old-timey blues players as they're often the make the original old blues artists used back in the '20s and '30s coming out of ragtime and whatnot. OS built a ton of their instruments for distributors, however, which is why this one bears the name "American Conservatory of Music" -- a mail-order (I think) tutoring service from the time.
Despite the name, everything about the build is pure OS -- squared kerfing inside, general body shape, decalomania rosette, the fun "faux binding" where they've sanded the edges to look like binding and finished it in natural... I could go on and on.
These Oscar Schmidts (under names like Stella and Sovereign) are super popular with country-blues and old-timey blues players as they're often the make the original old blues artists used back in the '20s and '30s coming out of ragtime and whatnot. OS built a ton of their instruments for distributors, however, which is why this one bears the name "American Conservatory of Music" -- a mail-order (I think) tutoring service from the time.
Despite the name, everything about the build is pure OS -- squared kerfing inside, general body shape, decalomania rosette, the fun "faux binding" where they've sanded the edges to look like binding and finished it in natural... I could go on and on.
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What's nice about this guitar is that it's entirely crack free... well... except for some dried-out hairlines in the fretboard which don't amount to anything.
My work on it included: neck reset, fret dress, new ebony pyramid bridge, replacement MOP dot, new bone saddle, cut-down of the original nut, and a brand new set of "vintaged" '20s-style repro tuners from StewMac. The originals were shot... and yes... I did try to save them, but they were just too far gone.
My work on it included: neck reset, fret dress, new ebony pyramid bridge, replacement MOP dot, new bone saddle, cut-down of the original nut, and a brand new set of "vintaged" '20s-style repro tuners from StewMac. The originals were shot... and yes... I did try to save them, but they were just too far gone.
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This guitar was played as a Hawaiian model originally as it had a raised nut and the tuners reversed for easy tuning while playing it in one's lap. The original bridge was also set high for lap play as well, and I would have used it again except that it had cracks all over it and was unfit for regluing (and, consequently, it had been reglued in the wrong position a couple times before I got this guitar).
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Frets are all nice and level now and the action is perfect. Strings are new DR Sunbeams, 50w-11, which is as heavy as I really suggest on these old ladder braced guitars.
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Nice little looker, huh? I like the tobacco sunburst... very fitting!
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This rosette is a decal and is totally cool -- it's got a reflective metallic quality to it.
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See how far off someone reglued the original bridge at one point? Downright wonky. I could touch it up... but why? Character is what guitars like this are all about.
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Backstrip is a decal as well.
Oh, and another repair I forgot about -- the back & top to side seams were coming up all over this guitar and I had to reglue a bunch of that as well...
Oh, and another repair I forgot about -- the back & top to side seams were coming up all over this guitar and I had to reglue a bunch of that as well...
...and on top of that, I also forgot about regluing some braces as well. The works on this fella!
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These "vintaged" repro StewMac tuners are awesome. They look the part but work better than the originals and have dull-finished buttons to match the old (worn) bakelite look.
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New endpin, too.
Can't say enough about how great these guitars sound for open-tuned, bluesy or country-bluesy fingerpicking. They're just tops -- warm and big and loud. The 25" scale length helps, too, especially compared to other guitars at the time which typically have a 24" length (ie, more sustain, bigger volume).
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