DIY: My tele with palet wood – “Freedom”

This is the story of this guitar, but even more so of my first woodworking project.

I’ve always been fascinated by woodworking and for a long time I’d wanted to start making a guitar that I could play on stage and that would have a story to tell. I watched hours and hours of guitar-making tutorials, and woodworking is a wonderful art. The story caught up with me in December 2024, when my boss told me I’d be fired two weeks before Christmas. I couldn’t understand the decision, and worse still, I felt in great financial danger… so my head was a mess. That’s when I said to myself: “Do something with your hands to clear your head”, and creating a guitar was the obvious choice.

I had a few days to mull over the decision, and I set about finding a pallet to salvage because the idea of making a guitar from wood that nobody wanted anymore resonated perfectly with my professional situation at the time. As fate would have it, the very next day, during my last week at the office, a pallet had been left near my desk (no idea who, why, or how). The sign of fate was too obvious to ignore, and the next day I returned with a crowbar to take the wood apart. The project was launched.

I want this guitar built before I get a job again, and more than that, I dream of trying it out on stage, so why not at SOUL CLAIM‘s last live show? This is how the project is progressing…


Some references at first & Shopping list


The Thomann basket was donated in its entirety thanks to the generosity of my former colleagues at Skeepers (as a parting gift). My heartfelt thanks go to: Sarra, Charles, Julien G, Hélène, Alix, Chloé, Mathilde, Tonio, Christelle, Emilie, Cyril, Abby, Antoine K, Thierry, Isa, Chacha, Julie, Lambert, Jean-Philippe, Victoria, Nadia, Mélanie S.


The crafting gallery

I cannot resist sharing some key steps of the project. This is so exciting to build something from scratch with our hands!

What to do at the crafting workshop?

First, thanks to Arthur from Gueuledebois.fr, the initial woodblock is now ready to be crafted. In a single afternoon, I have to:

  1. Create the MDF template for:
    • Control cavity
    • Neck pocket back to fill the body template
  2. Shape roughly the body with the band saw
  3. Use the router to:
  4. Drill the Jackhole: Ø 22 mm (0.875″)
  5. Drill the volume button hole: Ø 8 mm
  6. Drill the strap blocks holes: Ø 2,6 mm (0.104″) – Depth 19 mm