Rosette inlay
The design of my soundhole rosette is very simple , but I believe it is elegant. The funny thing is that it came about by mistake. A few years ago I was laying out a very traditional rosette of inner and outer purfling with an abalone middle. Mistakenly, I left out the inner black white black (BWB). I liked it so much that it is now my standard rosette. Below is the rosette on a completed guitar.
I use 1/16″ BWB purfling and Abalam, a type of abalone product. I have used both straight pieces and curved pieces at different times and I prefer the curved Abalam for time savings. Abalone naturally has discontinuities, therefore, fracturing the Abalam during installation is un-noticable.
The BWB purfling is bent using the hot pipe bending tool shown below. This hot pipe was inspired by some concepts in the Guild of American Luthiers “Lutherie Tools” book and is powered by a 300 watt incandescent light bulb. A 32″ strip will go around the hot pipe 2 and a half times making two complete rings per strip. It takes three strips to make one rosette.
I use the Stewart MacDonald rosette cutter with a dremel tool to cut the .050″ channels for the rosette.
The inner cut is for the sound hole. For the sound hole, I cut .050 from each side, leaving about .010″ in the center to be cut with a razor knife after bracing is complete.
After cutting all the channels, the bent purfing is weasled into the groove. It takes some coaxing. A strip of nylon is glued between the BWB to displace glue and later it is removed and replaced with Abalone.
Here it is before gluing and sanding.
After gluing and sanding the nylon is peeled out, leaving a channel for the abalone.
The top of the rosette is covered by the finger board on a steel string guitar. Here are the family of four with their shiny new rosettes installed.
Yesterday was a pretty good day.