An old trick that I learned years ago when I played electric guitar all the time, is that if the neck is finished with nitrocellulose, you can take one of those Scotch-Brite sponges that has the abrasive green plasticky part that is bonded to the foam sponge, and with the sponge DRY, right out of the package, use the green part very gently up and down the neck until is produces a nice sheen, you do this very gently but with a few deliberate strokes, and not hard enough to remove the finish down to the wood, and it changes the surface texture so that it is more like a satin finish than a gloss finish.
You can then buff it with a shami or other cloth to remove the dust particles. I did this on two guitars and it improved the play-feel significantly...
You can do this yourself in like 5 mins without involving the cost/time of a luthier - the main thing is that you have to be patient and use finesse.
Somewhere on youtube there is at least one video I saw of a luthier doing this and demonstrating the technique - I'll have to see if I saved it in my bookmarks.