When you carve the top on a les paul, if I'm understanding what you mean by step bookmatch, you work your way through some of the lumber's thickness and the bookmatch is lost. Occasionally you'll see a really high end guitar where the match is still good enough that the average person isn't going to see mismatches at the seam through the depth (or lost height) due to carving.
That said, when you buy japanese guitars, they often put a veneer over a plain hard maple carved top, and the match looks pretty nice - the veneers are sawn type, but like an acoustic guitar back, they come from only a small bit of board depth so the match stays good.
I've bought pre matched halves but not used them yet, and spent a fair bit of time looking through regular lumber sellers who claim to have this or that. To find a 2" thick board 8" wide with uniform figure from top to bottom and all the way through the thickness is rare, and the regular suppliers who think they have instrument wood often are selling flatsawn, which is not typical in really high end guitars.
it's really hard to find great quartered uniform figure boards, though, and when I do, they're always more than it would just cost me to go to a canadian supplier that actually specializes in providing top sets.
Building with dead quartered plain wood is another option that's nice, though if the grain is very straight, the glue line will practically disappear and a perfectly clean quartered top on any solidbody guitar is unusual enough that it still looks nice.
That said, when you buy japanese guitars, they often put a veneer over a plain hard maple carved top, and the match looks pretty nice - the veneers are sawn type, but like an acoustic guitar back, they come from only a small bit of board depth so the match stays good.
I've bought pre matched halves but not used them yet, and spent a fair bit of time looking through regular lumber sellers who claim to have this or that. To find a 2" thick board 8" wide with uniform figure from top to bottom and all the way through the thickness is rare, and the regular suppliers who think they have instrument wood often are selling flatsawn, which is not typical in really high end guitars.
it's really hard to find great quartered uniform figure boards, though, and when I do, they're always more than it would just cost me to go to a canadian supplier that actually specializes in providing top sets.
Building with dead quartered plain wood is another option that's nice, though if the grain is very straight, the glue line will practically disappear and a perfectly clean quartered top on any solidbody guitar is unusual enough that it still looks nice.