Selmer did not make many guitars — fewer than 1,000 — and the company stopped all production by 1952. Playable original Selmers are rare and command high prices. One of the largest collections was owned by Louis Gallo (1907-1988), a close friend of Mario Maccaferri, who also possessed blueprints of these guitars and was the consultant for the Ibanez CSL copies. Before the resurgence of interest in Django and his guitars, other European builders produced instruments that emulated the Selmer design, with their own variations. These instruments began to appear in the 1930s with Busato and Di Mauro, and in the 1940s there were Jacobacci, Favino, Anasatasio, the Gérôme Brothers, Olivieri, Rossi, Bucolo, Patenotte, Siro Burgassi, and a few others. In the 1970s, Selmer copies were produced in Japan for CSL and
Ibanez, and in the 1980s for Saga Musical Instruments under the "Saga" brand. A few French luthiers continued production through that time as well, including Jean-Pierre Favino and, more recently, Maurice Dupont. Some high-grade luthiers outside Italy and France have offered Selmer-style guitars. These include Marco Roccia, Jerome Duffell, AJL (Ari-Jukka Luomaranta), John Le Voi, David Hodson, Rob Aylward,
Chris Eccleshall, and Doug Kyle in the UK; Michael Dunn, Shelley D. Park, and Michael Whitney in Canada; Leo Eimers in the Netherlands; Risto Ivanovski in Macedonia; and Rodrigo Shopis in New York City. Inexpensive factory instruments from Asia have also become available under the Gitane and Dell'Arte/John S. Kinnard brands. Common departures from the original designs include omitting the internal resonator, adding a scratchplate, using solid (non-laminated) woods, and building D-hole models with the neck joined at the 14th fret rather than the original 12th. ==Surviving original Selmers==