Review of the Eastman FullerTone Offset ’62]

Review of the Eastman FullerTone Offset '62]

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What is it?

While Eastman might have made waves building very impressive premium spec Chinese-made acoustic and electric guitars inspired by classic designs, it took an interesting departure in 2019 with the Romeo. And started a journey that has led us here – a very good place to be.

The Romeo semi-hollow design was a distinctly original Eastman – designed by its LA custom shop-based master luthier Otto D’Ambrosio. The solid-body Juliette followed, but it was last year’s FullerTone SC and DC models that saw the company’s vision for quality and value come into stark focus.

These sub-$1,000 electric guitars delivered big on value with Eastman’s boutique-leaning standards, but alongside a two-bolt, long-tenon neck design that was a genuine progression for bolt-on guitar design. Now here’s a third FullerTone – a more affordable take on the model that initially surfaced in the select higher-end USA D’Ambrosio Series in 2024 – and I’m getting the feeling this might be Eastman’s strongest statement in the guitar market yet.

(Image credit: Eastman)

Well, look at it. The DC and SC models absolutely have their charms – especially as fresh design statements from Eastman with distinct pickup configuration options. But as an offset, my first impression is this FullerTone vision immediately has a wider potential appeal. And a few things are intriguing me further here as I take the Dakota Red model out from its reassuringly padded dark grey Eastman-branded gigbag.

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