Selmer guitar
The Selmer guitar—often called a Selmer-Maccaferri or just Maccaferri by English speakers, as early British advertising stressed the designer rather than manufacturer—is an unusual acoustic guitar best known as the favored instrument of Django Reinhardt. Selmer, a French manufacturer, produced the instrument from 1932 to about 1952.
History
In 1932 Selmer partnered with the Italian guitarist and luthier Mario Maccaferri to produce a line of acoustic guitars based on Maccaferri's unorthodox design. Although Maccaferri's association with Selmer ended in 1934, the company continued to make several models of this guitar until 1952. The guitar was closely associated with jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt.Construction
In its archetypal steel-string Jazz/Orchestre form, the Selmer is distinguished by a fairly large body with squarish s, either a "D"-shaped or longitudinal oval sound hole, and a cutaway in the upper right bout. The strings pass over a movable bridge and are gathered at the tail, as on a mandolin. Two "moustache" markers are fixed to the soundboard to help position the movable bridge. The top of the guitar is gently arched or domed—a feature achieved by bending a flat piece of wood rather than by the violin-style carving used in archtop guitars. The top is also rather thin, at about. It has a comparatively wide fretboard and a snake-shaped, slotted headstock. The back and top are both ladder-braced, which was the norm for French and Italian steel-string guitars of the time.Other models can be more conventional in appearance and construction, with the Modèle Classique, for example, essentially being a standard fan-braced, flat-top classical guitar.
Early days - "Maccaferri" or D-hole guitar
Early models have a large, D-shaped sound hole, which was shaped specifically to accommodate an internal resonator invented by luthier Mario Maccaferri – this was designed to increase the volume of the guitar and to even out variations in volume and tone between different strings. The scale, at 640 mm, and fretting of the early guitars was very similar to other contemporary guitars, but with a wide fretboard more typical of a classical guitar; they also had 12 frets clear of the body, although left hand higher fret access was facilitated by a cutaway in the upper right bout. These guitars were made in several versions, including gut string, steel string, seven string and four string versions, plus a special four string "Eddie Freeman" model. Many of these guitars, produced during 1932 and 1933, were sold to the UK market via Selmer's London showroom and it was during this period that the guitars became known as "Maccaferris" to Britons.Post-Maccaferri or Oval-Hole guitar
Maccaferri designed the original guitars and oversaw their manufacture, but his involvement with Selmer ended after 18 months. Over the next few years, the design evolved without his input. By 1936, the definitive version of the Selmer guitar had appeared, with an oval hole in pace of the large D-shaped hole, no internal resonator, and a neck with 14 frets clear of the body in place of the original 12. It was officially called the "Modèle Jazz", but also known as the "Petite Bouche" or "Oval Hole". These later guitars also have revised internal bracing and a longer scale length of. The vast bulk of guitars produced after the Maccaferri period were sold in Selmer's native France; these later guitars are always referred to as "Selmers".While Maccaferri may no longer have been around, the later guitars retain many unusual characteristics of his original innovative design, including the cutaway, the world's first sealed oil-bath machine heads and a top that is bent, mandolin-style, behind the floating bridge - something that contributes to the guitar's remarkable volume when played.
Use
Before the advent of amplification, the Selmer guitar appealed to European players the way archtop guitars did in America: it was loud enough to hear over other instruments in a band. The "petite bouche" model has an especially loud and cutting voice, and remains the design preferred by lead players in Django-style bands, while the accompanying rhythm players often use D-hole instruments. Modern exponents of the style often amplify their instruments in concert, but may still play acoustically in small venues and jam sessions. Gypsy jazz players usually couple the guitar with light, silver-plated, copper-wound Argentine strings made by Savarez, and heavy plectrums, traditionally of tortoiseshell.Today, the Selmer guitar is almost completely associated with Django Reinhardt and the "gypsy jazz" school of his followers. From the 1930s through to the 1950s, however, Selmers were used by all types of performer in France and in the UK. The first Selmers sold in the UK were used in standard dance bands, and were associated with performers such as Len Fillis and Al Bowlly.
In France, the Selmer was the top professional guitar for many years, and is heard in everything from musette to the backing of chansonniers. Leading players included Henri Crolla and Sacha Distel. More recently, the style of guitar has been associated with Enrico Macias.
Other Selmer guitars
Though best known for its steel-string D-hole and oval-hole guitars, during the Maccaferri period Selmer also made and sold Maccaferri-designed classical guitars, harp guitars, 6- and 7-string Hawaiian guitars, tenor guitars, a 4-string "Grande" model and the "Eddie Freeman Special", a 4-string guitar with the scale-length and body-size of a standard guitar, designed to use with a special reentrant tuning that was briefly successful in the UK market. Most of these instruments featured Macaferri's distinctive D-shaped sound hole and cutaway design, and many contained the resonator. Production of all but the Modèle Jazz ended by the mid-1930s. Selmer also contracted the well-known American luthier John D'Angelico to construct a small number of archtop guitars to be sold under the Selmer brand for the U.S. market; this arrangement was short-lived and apparently only three instruments were constructed, of which a single one is known to survive.Copies, replicas and similar guitars
Selmer did not make many guitars—fewer than 1,000—and the company stopped all production by 1952. Playable original Selmers are rare and command high prices. Before the current rise in interest in Django and his guitars, other European builders produced instruments that emulated the Selmer design with their own variations. These instruments began to appear in the 1930s with Busato, Di Mauro and—from the 1940s—Jacobacci, Favino, Anasatasio, the Gérôme Brothers, Olivieri, Rossi, Bucolo, Patenotte, Siro Burgassi, and a few others. In the 1970s, Selmer copies were produced in Japan for CSL and Ibanez, and in the 1980s for Saga Musical Instruments under the "Saga" brand. Meanwhile, a few French luthiers continued production. These include Jean-Pierre Favino and, more recently, Maurice Dupont.Elsewhere, some high grade luthiers have offered Selmer-style guitars. These include Jerome Duffell, AJL, John Le Voi, David Hodson, Rob Aylward, Chris Eccleshall, and Doug Kyle in the U.K., Michael Dunn and Shelley D. Park in Canada, Leo Eimers in the Netherlands, and Rodrigo Shopis in New York City. More recently, inexpensive factory instruments from Asia have become available under the Gitane and Dell'Arte/John S. Kinnard brands.
Common departures from the original designs include omitting the internal resonator, adding a scratchplate, using solid woods, and building D-hole models with a 14th fret neck-join rather than the original 12th fret join.
Surviving original Selmers
The number of surviving original Selmer guitars is not known exactly. Fewer than 200 are publicly known, and appear on the list below. Previously unknown instruments surface from time to time, and some no doubt remain undocumented in the hands of gypsy players or in private collections..- Number 085, 1932, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as of February 2011.
- Number 093, 1932, illustrated in the JWC Guitars website as of April 2013.
- Number 097, illustrated on p. 80 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 098, listed for sale on djangobooks.com as at March 2018, asking price $35,000, now sold.
- Number 099, illustrated on p. 242 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" as owned by Féré Schedegger.
- Number 103, previously owned by collector Scott Chinery, George Cole and, allegedly, Django's brother Joseph Reinhardt., also illustrated in the "sold" section of www.djangobooks.com; presently owned by Michael Bauer; listed for sale on djangobooks.com as at March 2018, asking price $50,000
- Number 126, 1933, currently owned by the "Cité de la musique" museum of Paris, France
- Number 130, 1932, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 132, illustrated on p. 58 and 190 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars", auctioned in Vichy, France, on 12 December 2008 according to vichyencheres.wordpress.com/catalogues. A very similar guitar, dated 1932, no serial number given except that it is the range 100-150, is documented on this
- Number 135, listed for sale on ebay.com, December 2014. Stated on the DjangoBooks forum to be the instrument played .
- Number 137, c.1932, listed for auction on 16 May, 2020, by Vichy Enchères, France, as per full page advert in May/June issue of "Acoustic Guitar" magazine, pre-auction estimate €6,500
- Number 142, owned and played by Ian Date
- Number 150, auctioned in Vichy, France, on 14 December 2013, according to vichyencheres.wordpress.com/catalogues
- Number 152, 1932, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number ???, 1932, for sale at https://palmguitars.com as at September 2018.
- Number ???, previously belonging to Francis-Alfred Moerman, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number ???, 1932, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 162, 1932, illustrated on p. 92 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" ; listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 163, 1932, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011; believed to have originally belonged to Joseph Reinhardt according to description on www.gypsyguitars.com.
- Number 175, label illustrated on p. 190 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 181, 1932, listed and illustrated as for sale on the Reverb website as at July 2019.
- Number 197 illustrated with Nils Solberg in the JWC Guitars as at April 2013.
- Number 199, illustrated on p. 97 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 214, illustrated on p. 68 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 216, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at October 2016, since sold.
- Number 218, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of the Djangobooks website as at November 2015.
- Number 219, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at January 2019.
- Number 221, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013; listed as for sale on www.rfcharle.com as at July 2017.
- Number 226, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 233, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013, currently owned by the "Cité de la musique" museum of Paris, France
- Number ???, c. 1933, description and illustration
- Number 238, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 241, illustrated on p. 102 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 248, illustrated on p. 91 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 252, illustrated on p. 84 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 253 1933, presently owned by UK guitarist Ade Holland....listed in the Selmer Maccaferri guitars book by Francois Charle as 4 cordes.
- Number 254, 1933, previously owned by Louis Gallo, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 256, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 258, illustrated on p. 199 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 261, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 266, 1933,
- Number 269, 1933, previously owned by Louis Gallo and then his son Ray Gallo as in this YouTube video, listed for auction by Gardiner Houlgate here as at October 2016.
- Number 271, 1933, listed for auction by Gardiner Houlgate here as at August 2018, estimate £8,000 – £12,000.
- Number 272, presently owned by Paul Vernon Chester, as per this YouTube video.
- Number 273 "circa 1934", currently at Palm Guitars Amsterdam.
- Number 275, 1932, previously owned by Mario Maccaferri and illustrated in the for sale section of www.retrofret.com as at September 2013.
- Number 276, "circa 1933", Owned by Brian Vance converted to 6 string by RY Aylward Guitars
- Number 277, illustrated on p. 67 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars", subsequently auctioned in Vichy, France in 2008 December 12.
- Number 278, illustrated on p. 62 and 67 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" currently owned by the "Cité de la musique" museum of Paris, France.
- Number 279, 1933, restored in 2012 by Lukas Milani and subsequently offered for sale via www.vintageandrare.com. According to the sale listing, this guitar was originally a gift from Maccaferri himself to the highly esteemed French pastry chef P.J. Franchiolo, father of the present vendor.
- Number 281, 1934, owned at one time by UK guitarist Ade Holland and subsequently by Stan Adleman.
- Number 282, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 284, 1934, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 285, 1934, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011; on sale at R.F. Charle as at December 2018, price €32,000.
- Number 286 bis, 1934, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at June 2019, price $38,500.
- Number 315, illustrated on p. 196 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 317, 1933, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 320, 1933, illustrated in the JWC Guitars as at April 2013.
- Number 338, illustrated on p. 98 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 348, illustrated on p. 119 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 350, 1934 previously owned by Francis-Alfred Moerman, Sarane Ferret's rhythm guitarist, illustrated on p. 145 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" ; listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 372, 1934, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 378, 1933, Left by Eddy Christiani to the Dutch Hot club de France foundation on his death in 2016; he claimed to have got it from Joseph Reinhardt, trading it for a Gretsch. Shown on the Eimers Guitars Facebook page, 13 July 2017.
- Number ??? , 1934, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011; for sale again at
- Number 391, 1937, mentioned in
- Number 403, illustrated on p. 116 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 417, 1933 illustrated on p. 111 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars", auctioned in Vichy, France on 2008 December 12 and illustrated in the catalogues section of vichyencheres.wordpress.com
- Number 418, circa 1934, illustrated on p. 106 and p. 111 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" ; listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 423 belonging to Nous’che Rosenberg, recently repaired by
- Number ???, composite of Maccaferri body and Selmer neck, restored by Rob Aylward, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 430, recently restored by
- Number 441, illustrated in the JWC Guitars as at April 2013, also offered on reverb.com by as at March 2016.
- Number 442, 1938, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013; on sale at R.F. Charle as at December 2018, price €18,000.
- Number 445, 1938, label illustrated on p. 191 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" ; listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011 and www.rfcharle.com as at April 2013.
- Number 447, illustrated on p. 114 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 448, 1938, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013, since sold.
- Number 451, originally bought by Challain-Ferret and now owned and played by Stephane Moriou. Unique left handed Selmer guitar, perfectly preserved.
- Number 453 bought by Henri Crolla in 1938, kept by his wife, Colette Crolla, in Paris. Perfectly preserved., illustrated on p. 207 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 475 used by Oscar Alemán c,1954-1980, donated by Alemán to the CECUAL, Chaco, Argentina. Modified. Noted in p. 248 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" as sold to Casa America, Buenos Aires in 1939, now carries label of Antigua Casa Núñez in soundhole.
- Number 485, illustrated on p. 244 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" as played by Raul Reynoso.
- Number 494, illustrated on p. 140 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 501, previously owned by Fapy Lafertin and Nils Solberg, illustrated in the JWC Guitars as at April 2013.
- Number 503. Django used a number of Selmer guitars in his life, but #503 is considered "the" Django guitar, used by him almost exclusively from 1940 until his death. It is now in the Musée de la musique, Paris, having been donated by his widow, Naguine Reinhardt.; illustrated on p. 134 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 504, the "sister" of Django's favourite guitar, owned and played by Stochelo Rosenberg from 1993-2010, subsequently sold; illustrated on p. 137 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number ???, "serial number adjacent to django's own", listed for sale at https://palmguitars.com as at September 2018
- Number 505, the other "sister" of Django's favourite, owned by Kees van Oorschot
- Number 507, owned and played by Ian Date
- Number 510, mentioned in
- Number 511, illustrated on p. 137 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 520, 1940, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011, also subsequently in the "sold" section of www.djangobooks.com.
- Number 525, illustrated on p. 138 and p. 158 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 526, 1941-2, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 529, 1942, listed for sale at www.gypsyguitars.com as at June 2020.
- Number 530, 1941, owned by Troy Harmer passed down by grandfather Stanley
- Number 536, 1942, listed and illustrated for sale here as at October 2016.
- Number 543, 1941, on sale at R.F. Charle as at December 2018, price €26,000; previously mentioned in .
- Number 547, illustrated on p. 118 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 548, 1942, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011; illustrated in the JWC Guitars as at April 2013.
- Number 550, 1942 or earlier, illustrated on p. 70 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars". Listed for sale on https://palmguitars.com as at September 2018.
- Number 552, previously owned by Loulou Gasté and currently owned by his widow Line Renaud. Was shown in the Paris exhibit "Swing de Paris" from October 2012 to January 2013.
- Number 565, 1942, presently owned by Michael Bauer
- Number 566 currently owned by Thomas Dutronc. Was shown in the Paris exhibit "Swing de Paris" from October 2012 to January 2013.
- Number 569, "c.1942", sold at auction by Lombrail-Teucquam Maison de vente, Paris, November 2016, sold price €22,940.
- Number 573, illustrated on p. 125 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" in the possession of Marcel Bianchi, present whereabouts not recorded.
- Number 574 owned by John Jorgenson, illustrated on p. 243 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 575, 1942, formerly belonging to Roger Chaput, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013, and subsequently on reverb.com by LEON Guitars of New York, asking price $35,000
- Number 585, illustrated on p. 128 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" in the possession of M. Van Crauwenberghe of Ghent, Belgium, present whereabouts not recorded.
- Number 589, illustrated on p. 122 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars". Listed for auction by Gardiner Houlgate, May 2016, see http://guitar-auctions.co.uk/portfolio-post/lot-171-1943-selmer-maccaferri-petite-bouche-gypsy-jazz-acoustic-guitar/, also subsequently offered on reverb.com by ATB Guitars of Cheltenham, U.K., apparently now sold.
- Number 593, mentioned and illustrated in
- Number 596, owned by Neil Andersson according to
- Number 607, rediscovered recently and shared by a group of young musicians called "Selmer 607"
- Number 612, 1946, Owned By Brian Vance uk model acajou, 6 strings
- Number 617, 1946, was auctioned in Vichy, France, on 2006 December 16 as shown on vichyencheres.wordpress.com/catalogues/
- Number 619, 1946, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at July 2015, since sold.
- Number 625, 1946, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 629, stated as being played on rhythm by Nous'che Rosenberg in ; a similar/the same oval-hole guitar is visible being played by Nous'che in other recent pictures
- Number 634, 1946, model acajou, 6 strings, Christophe Lartilleux - Latcho Drom
- Number 636, illustrated on p. 130 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 645, 1947, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 648, 1947, auctioned in Vichy, France on 2008 December 12 and illustrated in the catalogues section of vichyencheres.wordpress.com
- Number 652, 1947, previously owned by Stochelo Rosenberg, listed and illustrated at tfoa.eu as at January 2014. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8RGd8reElUQ
- Number 657, recently repaired by
- Number 662, 1947, previously owned by Sarane Ferret, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 665, 1947, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 670, mentioned in
- Number 678, 1947, mentioned in
- Number 681, 1947, this guitar was purchased in France from well known Gypsy Jazz musician Frederic Belinsky for www.artguitars.co.uk collection. Additional information here.
- Number 687, 1947, This guitar was listed, illustrated and subsequently sold by Francois Charle in Paris, 2016.
- Number 698, 1948, previously owned by Matelo Ferret, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 703, 1948, listed as sold on www.gypsyguitars.com, for sale on www.rfcharle.com as at July 2017.
- Number 704, 1948, collected and used by Django Reinhardt just before his tour to Rome; registered in the Selmer book as going to Django Raynal. The top of this guitar was crushed during this tour, and later replaced with an old top by Maurice Dupont; for additional information see http://www.djangobooks.com/forum/discussion/13138/djangos-selmer/p3.
- Number 709, 1948, currently owned by the "Musée des musiques populaires" in Montluçon, France.
- Number 717, 1949, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013, since sold.
- Number 719, previously owned by Henri Crolla, illustrated in the JWC Guitars as at April 2013.
- Number 731, 1948, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.rfcharle.com as at April 2013.
- Number 744, 1949, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 757, 1948, previously owned by Bert Niblett of the 1950s "Club Django" in London and then by Roy Stevens, listed for sale in February 2014 by Paul Stevens at https://www.facebook.com/groups/527733247341630/about/; more information on Bert and this guitar available at https://gypsyjazzuk.wordpress.com/36-2/bert-niblett/
- Number 760, mentioned in as in Japan with the lead player of "Note Noire"
- Number 763, 1949, listed and illustrated in the "for sale" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013, since sold.
- Number 786, 1949, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 793, was auctioned in France, Enghien les Bains, on 2012 October 28 as stated on http://www.enghien-svv.com.
- Number 795, 1949, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 807, illustrated on p. 133 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number 813, 1950, given by Django's widow Naguine to Les Paul, and retained by his estate. Extensively repaired by John Monteleone. On display at Mahwah Museum in Mahwah, New Jersey; additional information available at http://www.djangobooks.com/forum/discussion/13138/djangos-selmer.
- Number 817, 1949, table repaired by Jacques Favino, fingerboard repaired by Jean Barault in 2020.
- Number 822, 1949, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013.
- Number 823, 1948, mentioned in
- Number ???, 1949, listed and illustrated for sale at Carter Vintage Guitars as at June 2020.
- Number 824, 1950, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 828, recently restored by
- Number 831, 1949, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 832, illustrated on p. 242 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" as owned by Féré Schedegger.
- Number 833, 1950, previously owned by Ken Sykora, illustrated in the JWC Guitars as at April 2013.
- Number 849, 1951, previously owned by Loulou Gasté, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 851, 1951, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 859, 1951, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011; on sale at R.F. Charle as at December 2018, price €28,000.
- Number 861, 1952, used on recordings in Australia by Ian Date. Listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011.
- Number 862, 1951, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011, also subsequently in the "sold" section of www.djangobooks.com; presently owned by Michael Bauer
- Number 863, 1951, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.djangobooks.com as at February 2011.
- Number 865, 1948, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.rfcharle.com as at April 2013.
- Number 866, 1950, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at February 2011, also subsequently in the "sold" section of www.djangobooks.com.
- Number 872, 1952, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at April 2013, also subsequently in the "sold" section of www.djangobooks.com.
- Number 879, illustrated on p. 243 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" as played by a member of "The Rhythm Brothers".
- Number 881, illustrated on p. 243 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars" as owned by Raul Reynoso.
- Number 882, 1951, listed and illustrated in the "sold" section of www.gypsyguitars.com as at December 2014.
- Number 884, illustrated on p. 241 of "The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars".
- Number ???, 1952, listed for sale at https://palmguitars.com as at September 2018.
Other Maccaferri guitars
Following his severance from Selmer, in 1939 Maccaferri moved to the United States and became interested in plastic manufacturing. He produced plastic classical and steel-string guitars — of similar shape to his Selmer designs, albeit with F-holes — in the 1950s and 60s, along with many musical and non-musical plastic products. Produced first under his own name, and after 1964 under the name "Mastro", the guitars were of short scale, but accurately fretted and intonated. These instruments were not a huge success at the time and are now considered oddities. However, the many variants of Maccaferri's plastic ukulele enjoyed a considerable vogue in the 1950s and sold in large numbers.
Maccaferri also collaborated with Ibanez guitars in the late 1970s and early 1980s to produce 440 updated versions of his original D-hole design. They were individually signed by him and are considered quite playable and collectable.