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Features
  • Solid White Oak Body with Satin Finish: The guitar boasts a solid White Oak (Patagonian) body—not a laminate—offering enhanced resonance, harmonic richness, and sustain. The satin polyurethane finish showcases the natural wood grain without the extra weight.

  • Versatile Dual Single-Coil “Paradinamic” Pickups: Equipped with two Paradinamic® single-coil pickups (neck and bridge), this H/S configuration (actually S/S) provides classic Tele twang, clarity, and dynamic tonal expression. A 3-way blade switch enables bridge, both, or neck pickup selection, while master volume and tone knobs offer control.

  • Maple “C”-Shaped Neck with Rosewood Fingerboard: Features a maple neck with a comfortable “C” profile and rosewood fretboard (9.5″ radius) offering smooth playability. The neck includes 22 vintage-style frets (5150), ABS synthetic nut (42 mm width), and steel-core reinforcement for tuning stability.

  • Vintage-Style TL Bridge & Classic Hardware Finish: Includes a vintage-style 3-saddle Telecaster bridge, bolted on with a 4‑bolt neck plate, and finished with chrome hardware. The pickguard features a classic 3-ply black/white/black sandwich style, lending the guitar both stability and timeless aesthetics.

Why We Love This
  • Budget-Friendly Beginner with the Natural Wood: As my first electric guitar in college, the Natural Wood Newen Tele felt and sounded more expensive than ₹20K. The satin finish rosewood fretboard and maple neck were smoother than many cheaper brands. Action was decent straight out of the box—ideal for learning scales and chords.

  • Gig-Ready Tele Tone in Blue: I took the Blue variant to a cafe open mic. With Tommy‑tone single-coils and the vintage-style 3‑saddle bridge, it delivered that classic twang and bite. Loud enough to cut through acoustic sets yet clean dial-in. I got compliments on both tone and the rich blue finish.

  • Solid Build and Sustain on the Red Finish: Played metal riffs at full gain in my Jaipur apartment—no buzzing, great tuning stability. This guitar’s white oak body feels surprisingly sturdy and resonant. I liked playing open chords and palm-muted chugs; it wasn’t a flimsy entry-level feel.

  • Comfortable Feel with Vintage Playability in Dark Wood: Being smaller in build with Telecaster-style shape, I could practice for hours without wrist strain. The neck width and scale length felt friendly for Indian-sized hands. The Dark Wood variant had a warm tonal response that fits both fingerpick and overdriven styles.

Customer Reviews