April 07, 2023
I love my Glarrys. I have 2 now and bought a 3rd for a friend so they could get back into guitar.
Owning a Glarry means you'll need to learn a little bit about guitars...like "how to adjust a truss rod" to your preference (turn a screw), and maybe an intonation of a string (turn a screw while on a tuner), or maybe the nut needs a little bit of graphite for smooth string movement (add graphite powder).
If you're looking for a perfectly-set-up guitar that's been looked at by 5 people an ...
I love my Glarrys. I have 2 now and bought a 3rd for a friend so they could get back into guitar.
Owning a Glarry means you'll need to learn a little bit about guitars...like "how to adjust a truss rod" to your preference (turn a screw), and maybe an intonation of a string (turn a screw while on a tuner), or maybe the nut needs a little bit of graphite for smooth string movement (add graphite powder).
If you're looking for a perfectly-set-up guitar that's been looked at by 5 people and hand-polished while being presented to you in somewhat of a ceremony, Glarry is not for you. When you own a Glarry, it's yours, at a reasonable price point. Drop it. Dent it. Scratch it. Sign it with a Sharpie. It's yours and you didn't pay a fortune for it so have some fun with it. Get into guitars.