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September 17, 2008
Hamer Guitar Workshop Featured in Premier Guitar Magazine


We've worked hard to create great products that bring joy and satisfaction to our clients. Our efforts are acknowledged worldwide by collectors and fans, artists and our peers in the industry. Today is a good day for the guys in the shop as their latest work, the Talladega Pro is featured on the cover of the October issue of Premier Guitar magazine.

Click here to read the entire article


September 29, 2008
Talladega Pro Wins Hamer's 8th Editors' Pick Award in a Row

L to R: Mike, Enrico, Dave, Tom, Todd, Mark, Collin, Gary, Mike D. and Jamie.

The headline says it all. The guys in the shop are doing exactly what they do best and the acclaim from the reviewers is pouring in. Today they are celebrating yet another Guitar Player magazine Editors' Pick award—our eighth in a row! GP has reviewed eight of our guitars since 1999, and every one has recieved this award, quite a feat. That's what happens when great design meets flawless execution.

Congratulations to the Hamer crew, world champions and the best builders in the business!

Click here to read the entire article


October 03, 2008
Glenn Tipton Guitar Update

It has been a while since we've showed any of the Tipton progress, so here's a little update. Glenn wanted an off-white color so Gary sprayed out a white base coat on the guitar first. Then he mixed and shot two slightly shaded variations using our variant system tints.

I emailed this exact photo to Glenn on the road to get his feedback. Usually, we send the actual samples to our customers along with a form to sign for approval, but in this case it wasn't practical. We'll have to live with the color shift from the video monitor.

Glenn liked the yellower version to the left, so Gary went ahead and sprayed out the guitar. Glenn also suggested that we put a sightly contrasting color on the bevels to make them stand out. I suggested that perhaps we didn't want it to be overtly noticeable, just enough to give the guitar depth under the lights, and he agreed. Gary had the idea to use a little shaded pearl tint powder, so we went with that.

I think it's looking good—slightly different for Mr. Tipton, but cool nonetheless. Here's the headstock.


November 10, 2008
1980s Flashback Invades Workshop

Sometimes you don't know what you've got 'til it's gone. Ok, so maybe that's not exactly what this story is about, but it's a lesson learned just the same.

Recently, Kim, our customer service manager walked up to my desk holding a new prized possession—in the shape of a beer label. It was a 1980s vintage Hamer "Miller" guitar. When I saw it I started to laugh, but not for the reason you might suspect.

Back in the crazy 1980s Hamer supplied Miller Brewing with a series of special Miller-branded guitars. These instruments were intended for use by bands in the brewer's national live-music promotional campaign. To tell the truth, I thought it degraded the image of our shop, but when it came time to design the guitars I did my damnedest to make them as cool as I could. I took the classic beer bottle label and logo and distorted it into a usable guitar shape—a sort of Gumbyesque double cutaway. The figured maple top was tinted a deep cherry red to emulate the brand's logo without giving up some of the Hamer mojo that a solid color would obscure. The Miller logo was big and bold and I liked the phrase "high life" so we kept that on as well. Finally, the rest of the guitar was bathed in a metallic gold color, which was not only replicated the look of the beer can, but was a traditional electric guitar color too. The rest of the axe was pretty much stock Hamer fare, with two of our original Peter Green/Gary Moore spec. humbuckers and the classic Hamer sustain block bridge. Given the parameters of the exercise, I felt I'd done a good job. We made a couple dozen of them, and then it was over. Good riddance, I thought. Still, over the years people always asked about them, and reluctantly we acknowledged their existence. How embarrassing.


The Ragin' Cajun, Darren Wallace, throws down some T-Bone on the "High Life"

I'd pretty much forgotten about the whole deal by the late 1990s when I came face to face with irony in its most glorious and humbling incarnation. My friend Jon Tiven invited me to tag along to a sound-check at a Manhattan club one Friday afternoon, but I had no idea what I was stepping into at the time. Jon knew that I was a huge Fleetwood Mac fan, and an even bigger Peter Green fan, so as we ducked into the darkened club my eyes barely had time to adjust before Jon was introducing to Mr. Tone himself. We were at one of the few American appearances of "Peter Green's Splinter Group." As Jon made the introductions, Green seemed gracious but somewhat distracted, as though he'd rather be tuning up. That was, until, he heard the word Hamer.

"Nigel!" Green shouted emphatically towards the stage where his band-mate Nigel Watson was standing. Now I thought he was ignoring me completely.

"Nigel" he shouted again, The Miller Guitar! He's the man who made the Miller guitar," Now, the man was beaming and pointing at me. Suddenly I had everyone's attention, and handshakes were had all the way around. Yes, it's true, Peter Green had, and loved a Hamer Miller Guitar—I could hardly believe the surreal moment. We chatted for a while about instruments and blues and... beer. Then it was time for the sound check, and as Green walked away I began to chuckle. When my chuckle turned into hysterical laughter, some people near me looked at me as though I were going mad. The weight of the irony was full upon me, and I was enjoying the lesson—everything matters. It's something I remember every time I contemplate a new guitar.

Approach each task as if it were the one that will define you.


Reunited and reconciled. By the way, this guitar sounds incredible.


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