After finishing my Ambertone guitar, I ordered a low-cost gigbag for it, as I was not expecting to take it out for playing, it was just going to be stored in the corner of a room for a while, perhaps to be sold when I needed a few bucks. I purchased a Chromacast electric guitar gigbag from either eBay or Amazon (I can’t remember), got it a few days later, and put the thing in my spare bedroom.
That was about a month ago. A few days ago, I wanted to do some finishing work on the Ambertone (basically, lining the body cavity with copper shielding, I’ll cover that in a future blog) and pulled the gigbag out of the corner. As I was unzipping the bag, I found that the flaps were not opening up properly. Then I started feeling a sticking as I opened the bag a bit more. Sure enough, the inside of the gigbag had adhered to the guitar itself in a number of places on the front and back of the body.

The inside of the gigbag was made of a really cheap vinyl, not cloth that I find on most other gigbags. Now I knew this wasn’t a great gigbag, not much better than a heavy-duty trash bag with a zipper and pocket on it, but I would think that it would at least not stick to the guitar finish after only a month.
Years ago, I pulled my Peavy T20 bass out of storage. It had been in its hardshell case for a few years without opening, and was in a closet that did not have great temperature/humidity control. The foam padding had stuck to the guitar and strings, and it took me a full day to clean it off. This Ambertone situation was quite similar, only that it had been in the bag for only a month, and the bedroom was temperature and humidity controlled.
Anyone who works with guitars a lot knows that vinyl does not work well with various lacquers used on guitar finishes, especially older guitars and mandolins. This is not supposed to be the case with polyurethane finishes. In fact, I googled “vinyl and polyurethane guitar finish” and found very little stating that there was a risk. Anyway, I spent about an hour last night with Goo Gone and a plastic paint scraper getting the residue off. Some spots required a little bit of elbow grease.
I have other gigbags around the house, and I checked the lining on them. Almost all had some form of cloth lining. I may have talked about this before in a previous blog, but there was a time (remembering Mars Music again) when you could get a quality gigbag for around $10.00. Yeah, they were most likely made in China or Vietnam, but they served the purpose. Today, gigbags are more the norm than hardshell cases, fully padded and with some durability. Of course, one can expect to pay well over $60.00 for a decent bag. When the guitar is not even worth that, why pay that much?
Well, in this case, I know that I shall invest a little more for a gigbag. Even if the guitar is not worth much, investing in a gigbag for more than $40.00 should be considered. If purchasing in-store like at Guitar center, open the bag up to see what the interior is made of.
Chew on it and comment.