The 2395 is a hollow body electric guitar model introduced by Ibanez for 1973. It was made in Japan.
The 2395 features a thin double cutaway semi-hollow body design with an arched flame maple top with ƒ holes and multi-layer binding and flame maple back and sides bolted to a maple neck with a 22-fret maple fingerboard with binding, black block position markers and a black headstock. Components include dual Ibanez Super 70 humbucking pickups with chrome covers and individual volume and tone controls, black pickguard a fixed bridge with a Trapeze tailpiece and a bone nut.
For the 2395, Ibanez used Gibson's popular ES series. It is almost astonishing that a completely independent instrument was created for which there was no direct model. Because the 2395 combines design and construction features of the ES-335/ES-345 and the ES-330. Equipped with a slimmed-down Variton switch and a semi-acoustic design without a sustain block, the biggest and most obvious difference is the bolted neck, which is glued on the original.