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Pearloid

Sheet plastic resembling mother of pearl

Pearloid

Summary

Sheet plastic resembling mother of pearl

Pearloid inlays in the neck of a [[Gibson Les Paul]] electric guitar

Pearloid is a plastic that is intended to resemble mother of pearl. It is commonly used in making musical instruments, especially for pickguards, electric guitar inlays, and accordions.

Production

Pearloid is produced by swirling together chunks of celluloid in a solvent, then curing, which gives it a mother of pearl effect. It is sliced and bonded to or inlaid in other materials, such as the wood of guitar necks.

Use

Pearloid is used in any context where genuine mother of pearl or abalone might be used, as it is much cheaper. Gibson uses it as a substitute for the mother of pearl inlays in the fretboards on most of its guitars. Various colored versions are often used on items intended to have a retro appearance.

References

References

  1. Wright, Michael. (2000-01-01). "Guitar Stories: The Histories of Cool Guitars". Hal Leonard Corporation.
  2. (28 November 2007). "Pearloid | Sweetwater".
  3. (2023-01-25). "Epiphone Releases the Acoustic El Capitan J-200 Studio Bass".
  4. Lawless, John. (2024-01-10). "Gibson All American 5 string".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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