20% off
Description

1933 Gibson Black L-10 in excellent condition. The L-10 model was clearly in development for sometime at the Gibson factory before being listed as a catalog model. Examples as early as 1925 exist and are well documented. The first year the L-10 appears in the catalog is 1932. At the time it was the second most expensive guitar Gibson made at $175 and the only f-hole archtop other than the L-5. The earliest examples of the L-10 are essentially identical to L-5 in construction, features and sound. The tone bars are the carved version as opposed to latter kerfed style.k The serial number and 705 FON of this guitar places it as 1933. The later dot neck L-10s can be distinguished by their mahogany neck, further differentiating them from the L-5. This guitar features a 3-piece maple neck with 24.75” scale and 1.75” nut width. The neck shape is a soft V that fills your hand oh so nicely. The condition is remarkable with just the right amount of playing wear. The black finish is deep, rich and beautiful. The neck has had a perfect reset and refret here in our shop. The pickguard is an exact copy of the original and nearly undetectable. The top of the bridge is a compensated reproduction to aid in accurate intonation. Tuners, bridge bottom, tailpeice and pickguard bracket are original as is the truss rod cover and nut. The playability is second to none and the sound is everything a guitar this special deserves. The range of dynamics goes from soft and sweet to powerful chunk. Gibson archtop guitars are forever the bench mark to which all others are measured. This guitar is a perfect example why. Included is the original red-line “faultless” case which is also in excellent condition.

TR Crandall Guitars

TR Crandall Guitars

1933
Gibson
Excellent
Black
Original Hard
11 Years
$11,999 down from $15,000
TR Crandall Guitars
New York, NY
9:40 PM
Monday-Saturday 11am-7pm

We accept Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover, cashiers checks, money orders, and wire transfers.

48 Hour approval on instruments bought sight unseen. Buyer pays shipping and insurance costs both ways. Instrument must be returned in identical condition. Damage in return transit is the sole responsibility of the buyer.