The Hofner Colorama was the name given by British Hofner distributor Selmer, to a series of solid and semi-solid guitars made by Hofner in Bubenreuth, Germany. In fact the British Colorama name was applied to several different models, over the period 1958-65, and other than being produced by Hofner and filling the same role in Selmer's line-up, they had very little in common. This role could perhaps be described as entry-level non-hollow body - most were solid bodies, but the construction of this guitar actually has a wooden center block with separate top, back and sides, and hollow cavities.
Now this is a nicely constructed guitar, and relatively well equipped with two new Super Response pickups, but it would have originally shipped without a tremolo, just a standard trapeze-type tailpiece. Compare this guitar with a stock 1960 Colorama from early 1960. Tremolos were all the rage at this time in Britain, largely thanks to the Stratocaster playing of Hank Marvin of the Shadows. Marvin had designed his own trem unit for JMI which was fitted to a number of Vox guitars (notably the Consort and Phantom), but also available, albeit briefly, as an aftermarket part. Have a look at this tremolo in the 1963 Vox Precision in Sound catalog. This trem was only offered in the early to mid 1960s, and was most likely fitted to this guitar pretty early on in its life.
Other than the Hank Marvin Tremolo, this guitar is as it was when it shipped back in late 1960: two Hofner Toaster pickups, floating metal bridge and standard Hofner control console. But there are some very subtle differences to the early 1960 Colorama here. Firstly, the scratchplate has a different screw spacing having 6 screws rather than 5 - tracings of both of these scratchplates are available in the supporting members area. Secondly, the tuning keys have changed. They are still open gear plate tuners, but with a different shape plate, and more rounded buttons than the almost rectangular ones fitted previously.
The headstock reverse of two examples of the Hofner Colorama from 1960: left, early 1960 Colorama serial number 765; right, late 1960 Colorama serial number 815.
Although approximate dating (to within a year or two) is easy looking at hardware and other features, being more specific is not always easy. There are no date codes encoded into the serial number, or stamped elsewhere on this guitar (at least visibly). Assuming serial numbers are applied sequentially, this guitar (serial number 815) will have been produced around the same time (or after) the early 1960 example mentioned above (serial number 765). But the hardware changes detailed on this page suggest they were probably not part of the same batch. The potentiometers on this guitar have the date code 300, signifying, week 30 (starting July 25th) of 1960 (see reading pot codes). Remember, this date is a production date of the potentiometer - it would then have to be shipped to Hofner and fitted before the guitar could in turn be shipped. So this guitar, can not have left Hofner's Bubenreuth factory until late summer 1960 at the earliest.
Wear to the body end of this guitar reveals a little of its construction. The top and back are both made from a three-ply laminate of dark and light woods. Perhaps mahogany and birch or maple?
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C $1215