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1995 Martin D-18 Golden Era Limited Edition

Original price was: $2,249.00.Current price is: $1,999.00.

This is a 1995 Limited Edition D18 Golden Era.  Not to be mistaken with the standard production model that began in 1999.   This one has a Sitka top, no tongue brace, smaller  neck profile.

This guitar has been played a bunch and has its share of dings and scratches.  It has the sound to go with it.   It looks and sounds like an old 40s guitar.   The neck had a fracture that was repaired a few years ago before I acquired it.   It’s very well repaired and hard to see.

Out of stock

SKU: UD18GE Category:

Description

D-18 Golden Era Important Features:

Solid Sitka spruce top – no tongue brace
Solid mahogany back & sides
Ebony fingerboard and bridge
Brazilian rosewood peghead overlay
Bone nut and long saddle
1 3/4″ modified V, satin finished neck
2 5/16” String spacing
2 1/8″ string spacing / 25.4″ scale
5/16″ scalloped, forward shifted X Bracing (Golden era style)
Gotoh butterbean tuners

Many features were copied directly from at 1937 D-18, including: original mahogany stain color, black binding, small abalones dot pattern on neck, Brazilian rosewood headplate with old-style decal, hot stamp burned in reinforcing center strip, cloth strips on sides, 1 3/4″ V-neck, 2-5/16″ spacing at bridge, long bone saddle, bone nut, chrome vintage-style tuners; other features simialr to later D-18V. This first version of the D-18GE did not have an Adirondack spruce top like the later GE Series model.(pg. 139)

Click on the image above to see a PDF of the spec sheetAnother notable feature is that the 1995 model lacks a tongue brace (a.k.a., popsicle brace), similar to early D-18s. The sitka spruce top and lack of a tongue brace are two of the key differences with the later D-18GE (1999 to current; based on a 1934 model), which has an adirondack spuce top and includes a tongue brace.

This guitar is particularly interesting because 1995 is right at the up-turn in Martin production; it was among the first vintage-inspired models that have now become a staple for Martin and other manufacturers. For example, the 1985 D-18V sold 56 units, the (non-traditional) HD-18LE sold 51 in 1987, 15 1989 D-18 Specials, and 215 D-18 Vintage in 1992. In 1995, Martin built 589 “regular” D-18s and 320 of these limited edition guitars, so relatively speaking the Golden Era was a success. Maybe this showed Martin that the “lowly” D-18 could still be popular on the market and justified the development of the later “GE” series.