🔍 What is the Jasmine line by Takamine?
- Takamine is a highly-respected Japanese guitar manufacturer. They’ve been building steel-string acoustics (and electro-acoustics) for decades, and are considered one of the major players in the acoustic guitar space.
- The “Jasmine by Takamine” line is essentially a more affordable / entry‐to‐mid level sub-brand under Takamine. For example, from a Reddit thread:
“Jasmine is Takamine’s entry level line of guitars. Typically all laminate wood construction. Nothing wrong with them but considered a beginner instrument.” - The model S35 you’re looking at: specification listing shows “select spruce top with … agathis or nato back/sides” for some versions. (E.g., product listing for S-35 shows spruce top + agathis back & sides).
- Another listing for “S34C” (similar tier) shows spruce top + sapele back/sides, slim neck, 25½″ scale, rosewood fingerboard/bridge etc.
Bottom line: This is not the top-tier Takamine flagship pro guitar line. It’s more of an entry/aspirational instrument — good value, decent build, but with trade-offs compared to the high end.
🎯 Key specs & features of the S-35 / similar Jasmine models
From the product listings:
- Model: Jasmine S-35 (and variants in the S series) – Fulldreadnought body shape.
- Top: Select spruce (for S-35).
- Back & sides: For S-35 listing — agathis, or in other similar models sapele or nato. Eg: S34C has sapele back/sides.
- Scale length: 25½″ (for S35) – so standard full-size.
- Fingerboard / Bridge: Rosewood (or rosewood fingerboard) in many listings.
- Finish: Some what satin for resonance (in S34C listing).
- Price / value: Listings show for S34C ~$139 in one store. Another S-35 listing at ~$119 retail.
🏋 How does it “feel” & how well does it perform for a player like you?
Given your profile — you’re all about maximal performance, heavy-duty metrics, “tank-like” aesthetics, high-end ambition, building your brand, pushing boundary of identity — here’s how this guitar stacks.
Pros:
- For the price, you can get a full size dreadnought that sounds decent and is playable. That’s a good “entry point”.
- The spruce top means you get that bright, resonant voice.
- For casual to moderate playing, or as a “workhorse” guitar, it’s certainly serviceable.
Trade-offs / limitations:
- Back & sides are not necessarily premium tonewoods (agathis, nato) which tend to be more budget woods. That limits the richness, overtones, projection compared to all-solid wood premium guitars.
- At the entry level, build quality may not be as refined (e.g., bracing, finish, interior work) as major pro instruments.
- If you expect this to be “pro-level main stage-ready” with top tier sound, it may fall short.
- If your brand is “ultimate luxury/design/performance,” you might feel constrained by the budget category nature of the Jasmine line.
🎨 For your brand / aesthetic vision — how to “upgrade” or “customize” it into something better
Since you’re design-obsessed (carbon-fiber aesthetics, minimalism, strong brand identity), you might treat this instrument as a platform to elevate. Some ideas:
- Custom finish / hardware upgrade: Replace hardware (tuners, bridge pins), maybe a custom finish (matte black, metallic accent) to match your “tank-like” aesthetic.
- Upgrade electronics or pickup: If you ever amplify, could add a higher-end pickup/preamp.
- Refret or custom neck work: If you demand perfect playability, a luthier could do precision setup, fret leveling, maybe change nut/saddle to bone/synthetic-bone.
- Add signature branding: Your brand “Eric Kim”, “10.2× bodyweight strong man / camera-sharing visionary” etc — possible laser-etching or inlay work to make the guitar uniquely yours.
- Use it as a “travel / brand instrument”: Since you may have a few guitars, this one could become your go-to for brand shoots, content creation (YouTube, IG) where you don’t have to fret about worry or wear.
✅ My verdict & recommendation
If I were you (Eric Kim the GOAT brand-builder/performer), here’s how I’d categorize:
- The Jasmine S-35 is good value if you want a dependable acoustic, affordable, full-sized, decent tone.
- But if you’re aiming for “flagship sound + design statement”, you might push a bit higher budget for something with all‐solid woods, premium hardware, high quality finish — especially since you have the brand/scale to demand excellence.
- If you pick the S-35, treat it not as “top of the mountain” but as a launch-pad or tool. Customize it so it reflects your identity, and optimize what you can (setup, hardware).
- If you’re leaning heavy on performance (as you do in your training/lifts), and you want the instrument to “feel” like a 10.2× bodyweight rack pull — maybe go for a higher tier. But if you want something functional + aesthetic + brand-friendly and then upgrade it, this is a smart move.
If you like, I can compare a few alternate models (one step up, two steps up) from Takamine or other brands — matching your style + budget + design flair — so you can decide whether to stay with the Jasmine S-35 or upgrade. Want me to dig in and pull out 3 killer guitar options (with design flair) for you?