a piece of plastic affixed just below the strings on steel-string guitars to protect the sound board of the guitar from damage by aggressive strumming with a pick
Piece of material place on the body of the guitar to protect from pick scratches, and to hide wiring and pickups.
A pickguard protects the body of the guitar. Pickups=Pickups capture the vibrations of the strings and produce them through an amplifier.
Also called a "scratch plate" by some, this is a piece of plastic or metal that's usually attached to the body of a guitar on the treble side of the strings. It protects the top of a guitar from being scratched by your nails or by a guitar pick. Sometimes, the pickups are mounted to the pickguard. A pickguard can be stylish, too, coming in all sorts of colors, shapes, and combinations of different plastics molded together to look like retro Formica tables or tortoiseshell.
a very thin plate (usually made of synthetic material) glued to the soundboard below the treble side of the soundhole, ostensibly to protect the finish from scratches and gouges (some manufacturers put pickguards on both sides of the soundhole).
Also called a scratchplate, a thin covering screwed or glued to the top of a guitar to protect the guitar from picks and fingernails. Comes in a variety of colors and styles. Often cracked around the screw holes on vintage guitars.
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A pickguard (also known as scratchplate, golpeador in Flamenco music, and uncommonly, a finger rest) is a piece of plastic or other laminated material that is placed under the strings on the body of a guitar, mandolin or similar plucked string instrument. The main purpose of the pickguard is to protect the guitar's finish from being scratched by the pick, hence the name "pickguard".