I don’t want to hijack the thread - if we need to, we can start another thread. Bottom line is that the humidification of a guitar is its own kettle of fish, ball of wax, can of worms, what have you. There is no hard n’ fast rule like “any guitarist who knows anything humidifies their guitar.” It can help some guitars in some situations, but again, nothing hard and fast. Further, if your guitar is already stable and you introduce humidification to it, you can throw it out of true, so there is risk…
Sorry for being pedantic - I just wanted to get that out there…oh, and read **Carson’s **post - he has more experience than I do with this stuff and he advocates an even more gradual pace. Guitars really, really like being stable - the less you do to them, the better off you are - and if you do have to do stuff to them, do things VERY gradually and let the “system” re-stabilize BEFORE you introduce another variable. As I have heard folks say when describing how to approach the economy’s problems “you don’t want to end up like a fool in the shower, constantly twiddling the hot and cold water and not letting the system catch up to you so you actually know what temperature it is producing…”