All you need to do is: dress head-to-toe in red, line up one of the hundreds of Seven Nation Army backing tracks, strap this on, crank up the volume, and play.
Used throughout The White Stripes years, so as versatile as the range of songs that came out of those years. But the differences are in the detail, not in the overall look, feel and sound. This model isn't a perfect match to the original, nor as faithful a recreation as Eastwood's later release, the Airline 59 2P. Hutto, who was often seen playing one in the 60s. And, its recognition of one of the more obscure Chicago bluesmen - the more obscure the better - J. An unusual, if accident-prone, build - a hollowed fibreglass body (with rubber-edge strip to limit damage when dropped). A striking and unique shape - nobody else was playing anything else like this at the time. The perfect fit with The White Stripes chosen colour palette. You can see exactly why Jack White would choose it. In this case, retailer Montgomery Ward, which had sole distribution rights to Airline products. These were the days when your catalogue and bricks-and-mortar store was the place to go to buy your guitar - think Sears, Macy's, JCPenney. Valco produced the Airline range of guitars from 1958 - 68.
Well, to be entirely honest, Jack White played an original 1964 Montgomery Ward Airline J. This perfectly space-age, perfectly retro guitar. The song that earned The White Stripes a worthy Number 6 place in Rolling Stone's Top 100 Songs of the 00s - and launched a thousand football (and political) chants.