| ▲ | jdietrich 8 hours ago | |||||||||||||
Ergonomics. Any solid-body guitar that's designed to be comfortable when played sitting or standing will converge on a strat-ish body shape. You can make a computer mouse in any shape, but the shape of a comfortable mouse is constrained by the shape of an average human palm. The various curves and bevels on the Stratocaster aren't arbitrary aesthetic features, they're affordances to fit the human body. Change them too much and you get a guitar that won't balance on your knee or that pokes you in the ribs or that limits your access to the high frets. Ola Strandberg set out to design the most ergonomic guitar possible. His design is both radical and basically derivative of the Strat, because Leo Fender happened to find something close to the perfect solution in 1954. https://strandbergguitars.com/en-GB/product/boden-essential-... | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | codedokode 8 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
But, for example, are those horns (?) necessary for ergonomics? Do the potentiometers and output jack have to be positioned like that? Does the pickguard has to be the same shape? I do not think so. Les Pauls have different shape and are pretty popular too. > Ola Strandberg set out to design the most ergonomic guitar possible It looks somewhat ... not how you expect the guitar to look. | ||||||||||||||
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