I come from a musical family, so I've played bass and/or been the singer in a handful of garage/subsistence (all the beer you can drink) bands since university; in more recent years I've picked up the six string, mostly to teach my kids, neices and nephews enough to get them interested in the rock n roll faith. (Their grandmother taught them all to play piano starting at age 3 and at some point they all want to play the devil's music, which their granny refuses to teach.)
My mainstays are a Fender JP-90 bass, a Trace Elliot bass combo , a very sweet Fender Japan Custom Shop Keith Richards "Micawber" Telecaster replica tuned to open G and a Fender Frontman 25R with an Eminence Ragin Cajun speaker upgrade...excellent sound in a small package for home use, by the way, if you like the Fender sound but don't want to break the bank on a vintage Twin Reverb. My main effect is a Russian Big Muff Pi, though I have a bunch of other effects and processors.
I also have five or six vintage tube heads ranging from 10 to 100 Watts that I use with a variety of cabs with 8 or 12 inch Jensens or Celestions depending on what's being played and where...and always a few project guitars that I fiddle with when the cold weather hits.
My son, who's the most accomplished of my School of Rock proteges, has a very cool Fender Telecaster we built from a '72 reissue Fender Japan blonde neck, a new Mighty Mite maple sunburst body, American pups and controls and a very cool custom brass bridge in a chromed flame shape. He also has a red Gibson SG a la Angus Young and a decent Takamine a/e, an Epiphone stereo chorus reverb amp and a vintage Marshall single 12 JCM 800, a processor, a vintage Tube Screamer and a Morley wah . My daughter noodles around on a baby blue Fender american strat through a Peavey Blazer with some built in effects and has a modest acoustic.
One of my nephews has shown some promise as well, so I've kitted him out with a 50 watt solid state Marshall, a V-Amp effects processor, a birdseye maple Ibanez Sabre SA160 and a Stratacoustic a/e.
Counting the gear my other neices and nephews have, if I put all the stuff in one room I'm pretty sure it would make for the beginnings of a cool little vintage guitar shoppe.