Collings
C10-35

Great opportunity to grab a barely used C10-35 at a significant savings. The guitar looks brand new aside a couple small dings in the top, too small to photograph. Collings’ latest and limited edition take on the venerable C10 shares the appointments of the popular CJ-35, giving you specially selected ultra-lightweight tonewoods, non-scalloped Adirondack bracing with [...]

Collings
D1A Custom

Briefly owned and gently used, this D1A is difficult to tell from a brand new guitar. Someone's getting a deal. Collings builds monster dreads, and their venerable D1 paired with an Adirondack top has always been at the top of my list. This guitar is customized with a 1.75 nut. Handsome and understated tortoise binding [...]

Collings
D2H Traditional

Collings makes an outstanding dread, and their latest "Traditional" spec adds some extra goodness to what was already an impressive guitar. I ordered this one with a baked sitka top and it's extra responsive to my ears. With Collings' terrific new case. I'll let Collings describe it: The Traditional or "T" Series guitars reflect Bill Collings' return to his guitar making roots and offer a new tonal variation on the distinctive Collings sound. Each T Series guitar is built using animal protein glue and a very thin all nitrocellulose lacquer finish, making them exceptionally dynamic and responsive. Bracing and tone woods are adjusted for weight and thickness to create a voicing characterized by warm, rounded highs and a present low midrange, while retaining a [...]

Collings
I-35 LC

I’ve been lucky enough to play some very fine electric guitars, but in my mind there isn’t a finer semi-hollow guitar out there than the Collings I-35. The I-35 LC uses high quality laminate construction to faithfully reproduce the vintage tone of the original Gibsons. An outstanding guitar, with figured top and back, and mahogany [...]

Collings
290 black doghair

Guitars don’t come much cooler than this one … Colling’s venerable 290 with their distinctive doghair finish with pearloid pickguard and headstock overlay. You know how some guitars just have it? This one’s got it. Collings calls this guitar a modern-day tribute to the original workingman’s rock ‘n roll guitar. You’ll just call it a [...]

Collings
Waterloo WL-14 X

Here is a left-handed Waterloo by Collings WL-14, X-braced, sunburst, with the optional smaller neck carve -- which is still a beefy neck. Collings quality with minimalist aesthetics, harkening back to vintage tone of the original Kalamazoo guitars. The WL-14 is the flagship model of the Waterloo guitar line and the inspiration that started it [...]

Collings
Statesman LC

This lefty Collings Statesman LC was inspired by the classic sounds pioneered by players such as Chet Atkins and Eddie Cochran. The fully-hollow Statesman LC captures the vibe and tones of this iconic era with a trestle-braced maple laminate body, Bigsby B3 vibrato and TV Jones Filtertron pickups. Finished in transparent orange. Ebony fingerboard, haircut headstock, [...]

Collings
D1 Vintage Now

Here is a gently owned Collings D1VN. Save yourself $1250 off list. Collings builds a heck of a dread, with tremendous power and projection. Here is their venerable D1, but customized with a baked sitka top, Vintage Now neck and bridge, no tongue brace and cutthrough saddle. The top is a beautiful golden caramel color, [...]

Collings
360 LT M

I've been waiting for these guitars to start arriving, and it was worth it. Here's a new Collings 360 LT M guitar in a transparent warm white finish, ash body, curly maple neck, tortoise pickguard, Lollar P90s and the outstanding Mastery offset vibrato and bridge. As Collings says: "Our versatile 360 offset body shape has [...]

Collings
UT3 ukulele

Here’s a Collings UT3 tenor ukulele in some beautiful birdseye maple, with a spruce top. This is actually a righthanded uke, but no conversion required to make it a lefty. You can just retune it. Collings makes these infrequently, so good to snap it up if you are looking. Premium Birdseye Maple body; Spruce top; [...]

Go to Top