I say refinish it yourself if you have a good place to do it.
Get the aresol can nitro paints from reranch.com. They have complete tutorials tfor the novice to get great results.
It's not that hard...no matter what others may tell you.
It just takes alot of wet block sanding to get the final finish smooth and glossy. Don't try to learn by trial and error...follow the tutorial to start with and get pro results THE FIRST TIME.
Once you do one yourself you'll never pay someone 6 bills to do it for you again IMO.
We've had this out a few times now and it is becoming tiresome.
I'll just start with some FACTS...
The reraunch rattle can nitro is NOT the same as the nitro that is used on any high end nitro finished guitar.
You cannot get a "professional" finish with rattle cans despite what anyone says. You may be able to get an acceptable finish but not a professional finish. You might not be able to tell the difference but I and many others in the trade will be able to spot it from across the room.
Some reasons why rattle cans are inferior, You cannot control the flow, even if you warm them they spit. You can not add any fisheye or flow out additives to it, let alone the fact that you cannot shoot flat wet coats with a spray can because you cannot adjust the nozzle or spray pattern. You cannot adjust the flow or build to account for the meniscus build at the neck and fingerboard join. You cannot have several guns with different tips on hand for those tricky bits. An acceptable finish yes. A finish to match a top end guitar, a Les Paul for example, never going to happen.
Black is the hardest finish to get right. The only thing harder is a good burst. With this you would attempting both. Even if Gibson did the job it would not be as the good as a guitar finished to that spec from the white. They use different ground prep for different finishes. Some of which would be bound to the grain after it is stripped. There would also likely be issues with the binding.
You would be unlikely to be able to match the colour in the picture on Gibson's website. Matching the colour of any finish is an art that takes a lifetime to master on its own.
If you are not going to wet sand it to perfection I would suggest flat black or primer grey....those 2 colors hide alot of imperfetion.
What are you suggesting here?? Neither have a part in a professional guitar finish let alone a specialised burst.
There are many people that can shoot a quality nitro laquar finish on that LP.
Not unless they are practiced and competent when it comes to shooting bursts. I Know one person here in the UK. He does most of mine because he's better than me and in the long run that saves me money and gives peace of mind. A good burst is a joy an average one just looks well... bad.
Normally the ones who tell you that you can't do it yourself...do it themselves for profit.
Nope, It's normally myself or Light advising people not to get involved in refinishing without serious and I mean serious research and consideration. As I understand from Light he doesn't do refinishing for profit or otherwise, neither do I. There is a reason for that. I finish guitars all the time but not refinishing. We both hand out plenty of tips on how to do stuff yourself and I will continue to do so despite the fact that I do it for profit. Just as a matter of interest Jimistone, what do you do for your living??
I know we've been over this in the past but I will continue advise extreme caution to those that think refinishing is a viable proposition just as long as you keep telling everyone it's a breeze with Reraunch rattle cans.
For anyone that really wants to do it I'll just offer this advice. Do some serious research, practice on junkers, familiarise yourself with health and safety issues. If you still up for it I'd be happy to advise on specifics.
Nicole_Rose, I would seriously live with the guitar you have and start saving for that lovely looking burst on your next LP. You will not regret it.