this post was submitted on 22 Sep 2024
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Guitar maker sigma uses bone for it's nuts and probably bridges too. I'm not sure about Epiphone, they used a plastic nut on my LP but for all I know the inlays are some sort of shellfish.
It's also highly highly likely that a lot of guitars use shellac which is produce by an insect, especially likely for accoustic and classical guitars.
Thanks for helping and adding some names. If possible do you have a source on Sigma, if not I will try and find one within the next couple of days. Yes, I believe classical guitars are generally the main offender when it comes to animal parts in guitars, similarly it appears that a lot of the classical-type violins are the ones that still use horsehair.
https://www.colemansmusic.com.au/products/sigma-000mc-15e-mahogany-auditorium
Under the features section here they're listed as bone. I hadn't actually looked it up as I own one and bone is pretty different from plastic, especially when it splinters like mine did.
Thanks for the source, I am pretty sure that Fender is vegan then since I haven't found anything online that suggests otherwise and haven't noticed what you've described on the bridges and nuts on any of my Fenders.
If Fender uses bone, they're probably a whole lot more selective about it. My nut only splintered because it was a dodgy part, I don't think it's the norm. Sigma makes relatively cheap guitars, so I wouldn't hold Fender to the same standard.