Sunburst

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A Fender SRV Signature Stratocaster electric guitar with tobacco sunburst finish.
A Fender SRV Signature Stratocaster electric guitar with tobacco sunburst finish.

Sunburst is a type of finish for musical instruments such as electric and acoustic guitars and electric basses. At the center of a sunburst-finished surface is an area of lighter color (often showing the wood grain underneath) that darkens gradually towards the edges before hitting a dark rim. Among the best examples of a sunburst finish are Fender guitars and some Gibson Les Paul guitars. It was originally intended to imitate an aged French polish finish, as applied to classical string instruments such as violins.

There are various types of sunburst finishes. The two of most common being "tobacco sunburst," which is golden yellow in the very center and black around the edges and "cherry sunburst", which is a golden yellow at the very centre and cherry red towards around the edges. The finish is often transparent in order to show, and accentuate, attractively-patterned wood or wood veneers such as flame maple, but may be opaque where the wood is not strongly figured, such as basswood or alder.

Other sunburst varieties over the years included "Sienna Sunburst" and "Blue Burst", first introduced by Fender in the late '70s and mid '80s. The American Series Strat HSS and the Strat Plus guitars are fine examples. The British Burns company use greenburst finishes on a number of their guitars, such as the Steer and Scorpion.

There are also aged variants of sunburst finishes which are usually found on high-end boutique instruments from Fender, Suhr, Tom Anderson, Melancon, Don Grosh and James Tyler, such as Aged Cherry Burst, Fireburst, Lightburst and Antique Tobacco Sunburst. These aged sunburst finishes are mostly suited for quilted, spalted and figured maple tops, as well with other highly figured woods such as swamp ash and koa.

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