When playing with Albireo, my main instrument is a Thornbory Lynton 110/C acoustic with a Fishman pickup. It's also had a Fishman power-jack pre-amp fitted and that really improves amplified sound. The signal goes straight into the PA desk via a Behringer Ultra DI 100 DI Box. I've used D'Addadio J16's for years.
When playing electric, I've played an Ibanez Blazer strat copy (I think it's a BB550) for years. Live, it's through a Marshall JTM310 (30 watt all valve 2x10 combo). I recently acquired a 2002 Epiphone Les Paul (black with gold hardware) and I've been using that for a bit of variety on the later Prögford tracks.
The Prögford project guitar parts were most played on the Ibanez, using Ableton Live and virtual amp and cab simulators including some from http://nickcrowlab.blogspot.co.uk and lepouplugins.blogspot.co.uk.
I've also recently been exploring the world of guitar looping and ambient soundscapes using a Boss RC-30 and an Akai Headrush E1 in tandem with a bunch of delay/reverb pedals and an E-Bow.
Also cluttering the house up is an old, old Hofner jazz guitar that looks lovely but is a real bugger to play and a baritone ukulele. The uke is cheap and cheerful, but it's fun to play, and easy for a fat-fingered guitarist as it's in guitar tuning and is a little bigger than your standard tenor uke.
I also have a Fatar Studio SL880. To accompany that there's a smattering of midi gear. One day I might put some photos up here so you can see if it's worth coming round my house to nick them.
My first foray into instrument building has resulted in the magnificent beast pictured here, which can be heard on soundcloud.
So what do I do with all this stuff? The Albireo sound is pretty much a straight-ahead ceilidh band although we like to rock it up a little. I never really thought of myself as a lead guitarist in the traditional sense (partly because I can't play blinding solos), but as an accompanist. So I was more interested in feel than wailing away like a madman. It's what you don't play that counts. I was described as "sublimely subtle" by a local journalist and a bass player said he thought I sounded a bit like Vini Reilly at times, which will do for me!
The Prögford material is a different kettle of fish, and is marrying my love of metal and traditional folk. I make no claims to my shredding talents though, and some of those recordings are what one might call "digitally enhanced". Still, by any means necessary, and if it's good enough for Thin Lizzy, then it's good enough for me.
If you want to hear more of my work with Holly and fiction, some old recordings are up on my bandcamp site.