This one left my workbench yesterday:
Erm. Not an offset, and not a guitar. It is loosely based on the North African guembri, but uses thinner strings and, obviously, is made out of solid wood instead of the traditional hollowed-out body with skin on top. It has a 30" scale length, uses .052 and .042 strings tuned to a fifth (D - A). No frets, but I added fret line markers to the fretboard. Body is construction-grade 'mahogany' (actually an African cousin called kosipo, commonly used in France for doors and window frames), neck is flamed maple (leftover from a bass neck blank) and wenge. The tailpiece is a small section sawn off an aluminum ruler, and the bridge used to be a piano key.
It was a gift for the social worker that helped me get through my personal s**t for a few years. He's had a horrible year due to the increased poverty & mental reforms from our government and I thought he could do with a cool present at the end of it. He's a jazz guy and a big fan of Gnawa music who hasn't touched his guitars for a decade. The cool thing with having no frets is that he can play both western and microtonal music on this thing.
I totally forgot to take decent pictures of it but I did make a quick video of it - destroying Ornette Coleman's Lonely Woman in the process:
https://youtu.be/_sE0cONFgGA
Shoddy playing and s**t phone sound, but it gives you an idea.