Pure Acoustic Joy


I will never forget the first time I played a Froggy Bottom guitar. It was my first week at Wildwood, and I was settling into my role as the shop’s copywriter and resident sonic evaluator. One morning, our acoustic guitar specialist Brian asked me if I was into acoustic guitars. “They’re my favorite thing to nerd out about,” I replied. He replied that he had a special treat for me, popped open a case, and presented me with the most gorgeous parlor guitar I’d ever seen. “It’s a Froggy Bottom,” he said, smiling expectantly. I played a couple chords and completely lost my grasp of the English language as well as most of my motor functions.

“I…what…this guitar is…how…how…how is this guitar?” I sputtered as my brain short-circuited. Brian grinned and shrugged his shoulders, palms upturned. “That’s just what Froggy Bottom does.”

I was transfixed, so I had no choice but to take this beautiful parlor guitar—I believe it had an Adirondack spruce top and koa back and sides—for a test drive. Ten minutes turned to twenty, then thirty, and then I started feeling guilty. This wasn’t working, was it? So, with much pain in my heart, I put my new favorite guitar back in its case. I spent almost an hour writing a six hundred-word essay about what a magical experience I had exploring its fretboard. Anything less seemed like an insult to the artistry of the build. It may have been overkill, but surely I wouldn’t have to do that for every Froggy Bottom guitar. They couldn’t all be that good, could they?

I am happy to report that I was completely wrong. Over the last two years, I’ve had the privilege of playing dozens of Froggy Bottoms (there are certainly perks to being their biggest dealer!), and each and every one of them was just as jaw-dropping as that first serial.

Condition Report


This Froggy Bottom is in fabulous shape! It shows normal playwear from use, and it has just a few small cosmetic imperfections to report: a ding on the back binding near the bass-side lower bout, a ding on the top treble-side corner of the peghead, some small indentations on the front of the headstock, and some minor damage on the peghead's binding. Other than that, there are no cosmetic flaws to report! There's also some minor fretwear in the cowboy chord are under the unwound strings, but the frets are in great shape and have tons of life in them. And it comes with its original hardshell case, too!

Specifications:

Brand Used
Model2018 Froggy Bottom Guitars H-12 Limited
Top WoodSolid Adirondack Red Spruce
Back & Sides WoodSolid Koa
Neck Dimensions.830 1st - .890 9th
Neck WoodMahogany
FingerboardGabon Ebony
Fingerboard Inlays#7 Pattern Green Abalone
Scale Length25"
Width at Nut1 3/4"
Nut MaterialBone
Headstock InlayAbalone Frog Logo
TunersGold Waverly
SaddleBone
Bridge1 1/8" Ebony Pyramid
PickguardTortoiseshell
CaseOriginal Black American Vintage TKL with Green Interior

Why Order from Wildwood Guitars?

An instrument from Wildwood isn't just an ordinary guitar. It's your guitar. Each and every instrument we sell includes a full, point by point setup, an exhaustive evaluation, and expert shipping procedures, with first class, industry leading standards from start to finish. Why? Because you deserve it.

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Serial Number: H1980
$14000

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