All this talk of guitar restoration, refinishing etc has got me thinking back to a couple of guitar projects I have done in the past..
I remember a cheap Tele copy I had... I think it was originally hi-gloss black, but was a bit beaten up so I stripped it down and sprayed it a very pretty light blue using car paint! I had planned to but a clear gloss lacquer coat on top, but after a few coats of blue it had a sort of eggshell finish that I really liked, so I left it like that. I'll have a look and see if I can find any old photos (must have been around 1980?). I sold the Tele to a friend, who decided it would look good "natural" and stripped all the paint off - totally ruined it, cos the cheap body wasn't good enough to look good "naked"!
The other think I did around the same time was to build and electric guitar for a friend. I was known at the time as being "good at woodwork" and Colin asked me to make a guitar for him - he would pay for all the parts and specify what he wanted. He wanted it to be based on a Tele shape, but with "comfort contour" shaped back (like a Strat) and humbucker pickups.
I bought some fantastic Canadian Maple for the body (mail-order from a tonewood specialist). I don't remember too many other details, but the main thing was that Colin wanted it "as heavy as possible, for good sustain". I kept telling him that I should reduce the thickness, but he was insistant that he wanted it "chunky". The result? A guitar that was too heavy to play!!
It had a clear polyurethane finish and, IIRC, miniature toggle switches. Colin is still a good friend some 30 years later and we play in a Sixties covers band together, although he now plays bass. I'll ask him whether what happened to the old home-bult guitar - it would be interesting to see it again... but I suspect the quality of workmanship might be a little embarrassing.
I don'r remember exactly when I made it for him, but I think I was no more than 18 or 19 at the time.