Dr. Allen Platt escapes the business of his dental office to his workshop basement where he designs and builds custom guitars. PHIL JACOBS EDITOR LLJ LU CC UJ L=1 LLJ 44 f anyone ever needed to the whereabouts of Dr. Allen R. Platt, chances are good Dr. Platt would be in "hiding." His hiding place is the basement of his Oak Park home where he and Tfind wife Arleen and their two daughters, Danielle, 6, and Hallie, 4, live. There is no sofa there, no paneling or wide-screen television set. Instead, there are tools, machines and the smell of woods, beautiful woods. Using these tools and rose- woods and mahoganies, Dr. Platt can do what few oth- ers know how to do: He can hand-carve and build a gui- tar. During the day, Dr. Platt takes care of fillings. At night, he bends, carves and paints wood. Dr. Platt, 35, has played guitar for more than 20 years. During those years, he often thought about what it would take to make his own guitar. He always was good with his hands, mak- ing etrog boxes and jewelry boxes for family and friends. Then three years ago, he decided to become a luthier, a maker of stringed instru- ments. "I started getting inter- ested in woodworking," he said while preparing the inside of a guitar in his basement. "I've always enjoyed working with my hands, building things. I did some carpentry as a teen- ager. It's just something I love doing." Mrs. Platt calls the guitar building "therapy" for her husband. "Each instrument has its own soul in a way, and I feel a certain way toward each instrument." "My husband has golden hands," she said. "He's very creative, and this has been wonderful for the whole family. The children love to go downstairs and watch him. They have their own table next to his where they can work on something and spend time with him. It's a nice education, and it's a positive experience for all of Dr. Platt still owns the us." first guitar he ever played. Bending the wood to It hangs with three others make a guitar is, according on display in his basement to Dr. Platt, one of the keys workshop. in learning the craft, as is On a warm summer the carpentry skill of joining Friday afternoon, Dr. Platt wood. Historians write that chisels down wooden sup- the basic shape and size of ports for the inside of a gui- the modern guitar can be tar. There's nobody in the traced to the late 1880s in waiting room, no instru- Spain. ments needing sterilization, An acoustical guitar, like no phones ringing. Dr. the ones Dr. Platt con- Platt, in his basement, is in structs, produces sound from the vibra- tion of the strings. More modern electric guitars have an elec- tromagnet that picks up the sound of the vibrations and sends the sound through an amplifier. Guitars are largely made with curved sides and a flat or arched back. Dr. Platt receives wood from all over the country, which he uses to build the soundboard (front) of the guitar and the fingerboard. He even carves the finger- board fret positions. Frets mark the posi- tions of a specific Dr. Allen Platt escapes the day-to-day of a dental practice to do craft guitars in his workshop base- tone. ment.