Let’s be honest: swapping out your pickguard is the absolute fastest way to give your guitar a massive visual glow-up. It’s the easiest mod you can do, but it completely changes the entire character of your instrument.
But when you’re scrolling through endless sheets of pickguard materials, decision fatigue is real. Are you going for an authentic, road-worn look? A flashy, stage-ready statement? Or are you building a totally unique offset guitar from the ground up?
Whether you’re hunting for Stratocaster inspiration, upgrading your favourite bass, or looking for the perfect sheet of plastic for a custom luthier project, we’ve put together this visual guide to help you perfectly match your material to your guitar’s finish.
The Undisputed Classic: Tortoiseshell
The Style: Earthy, sophisticated, and deeply nostalgic.
Best Paired With: 3-Colour Sunburst, Black, Vintage White, or Sherwood Green.
There’s a reason the tortoiseshell and sunburst combo has been reigning supreme since the 1960s - it’s flawless. The rich reds, browns, and ambers in the tortoise pattern pull out the warmth of a sunburst finish, and they add a moody, complex layer to a stark black body.
If you play an offset (like a Jazzmaster or Jaguar), tortoiseshell is practically mandatory. At Rothko and Frost, our celluloid materials offer a deep, three-dimensional swirl that you just can't get from cheap, printed plastics.

👉 Shop Pre-Cut Tortoiseshell Guards and Blanks
The Retro Purist: Mint Green
The Style: Lived-in, authentically aged, and effortlessly cool.
Best Paired With: Olympic White, Sonic Blue, Fiesta Red, Shoreline Gold.
Fun fact: Fender’s original celluloid pickguards from the late ‘50s and ‘60s started out white. Over decades of exposure to UV light and smoky dive bars, the material off-gassed and aged into a highly specific, greyish-green hue. Today, Mint Green is the ultimate "if you know, you know" choice for vintage-inspired builds.
Mint green truly shines on Olympic White. The subtle contrast between a faded white body and a slightly green guard creates a perfectly curated, aged look. It’s also the ultimate anchor for pastel finishes like Sonic Blue and Surf Green.

Pearloid vs Parchment: Which Light Guard Wins?
When you know you want a lighter-coloured guard, the ultimate debate usually comes down to pearloid vs parchment. Which one fits your build’s personality?
Pearloid
The Style: Flashy, glamorous, and ready for the spotlight.
Best Paired With: Candy Apple Red, Surf Green, Daphne Blue, or any Metallic finish.
If you want your guitar to catch the stage lights and stand out on an Instagram feed, Pearloid is your best bet. It adds a premium, custom-shop feel to solid colours. A Surf Green Strat with a White Pearloid guard is pure ‘60s California surf-rock perfection.
Parchment
The Style: Understated, classic, and naturally softened.
Best Paired With: Literally everything.
Parchment is essentially an off-white or aged white. Brand-new, brilliant white pickguards can look incredibly harsh and cheap, especially on an older or relic’d guitar (See - How to Relic a Guitar) . Parchment softens that visual contrast beautifully. If you have a beautifully aged nitrocellulose body, parchment will blend right in without stealing the show.

The Maker’s Corner: Routing a Custom Pickguard
Can’t find the exact shape you need for your specific model? Fully embracing the DIY ethos for a scratch build? Buying a high-quality material blank is exactly what you need.
Routing a custom pickguard is an incredibly rewarding weekend project, provided you have the right tools and a little bit of patience. Here is the fool proof workflow we recommend for our DIYers and luthier clients:
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Build an MDF Template: Never run a router directly against a delicate original pickguard. Trace your original guard (or your custom paper design) onto a 6mm–10mm piece of MDF. Sand the edges perfectly smooth—your router bit will copy every single imperfection!
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Rough Cut Your Blank: Trace your new MDF template onto your Rothko and Frost pickguard blank. Use a scroll saw or bandsaw to cut close to the line, leaving about 2mm of excess plastic.
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Mount the Template: Stick your MDF template to the pickguard blank using strong, ultra-thin double-sided tape.
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The Flush Trim: Secure a router table. Use a sharp, bearing-guided flush-trim bit to trace the template, bringing the plastic perfectly flush with your MDF. Pro Tip: Take it slow. Rushing causes the plastic to melt or the corners to chip.
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The 45-Degree Bevel (Optional but Highly Recommended): Swap your tool for a 45-degree chamfer bit. Adjust the height so the bearing rides along the bottom edge of the pickguard, cutting a clean, professional bevel into the top edge to reveal those iconic 3-ply or 4-ply layers.
👉 [Shop All Pickguard Blanks & Sheet Materials]
Bring Your Vision to Life
Whether you are breathing new life into a beat-up ‘90s P-Bass or hand-carving a custom boutique build from scratch, the pickguard is the visual centrepiece of your instrument.
At Rothko and Frost, we stock one of the most comprehensive ranges of premium, historically accurate, and totally unique pickguard materials on the market. Don't settle for "close enough" - build the exact guitar you've been picturing in your head.
