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From the Kyser Clip to the Elliott: What’s guarding your frets? 🎸
We’ve all been there... starting out with a $15 trigger capo that lives on the headstock. But as we get deeper into the bluegrass sound, we start chasing that perfect tuning stability and tone. I’ve run the gamut from Shubb to Paige, and I eventually fell down the rabbit hole of custom Elliott capos (I’ll admit it: the Billy Strings influence is real). Where are you on your capo journey? - Are you a 'set it and forget it' Shubb fan? - Do you prefer the Paige/Elliott style that stays behind the nut? - Or are you still rocking the Kyser you bought in 1998? Post a photo of your 'daily driver' below!"
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Confession of a pick convert: why I have three BlueChips
For a long time I didn’t think very much about picks. I’d grab whatever felt decent, play, and move on. That changed once I started practicing seriously. At some point it hit me: the pick is the tool that actually touches the strings more than anything else. My hands, my guitar, my posture. But the single piece of gear in constant contact with my hand is the pick. That realization pushed me to stop treating it like an afterthought. That’s how I ended up with three BlueChip TP48s. One lives on my house keys, one on my RV keys, and one tucked into the little watch pocket of my jeans. If a guitar is around, a BlueChip is never far away. Before BlueChip, I used every gauge of nylon Dunlop right through the Primetones. They’re genuinely good picks, especially if you’re on a budget, and I still recommend them to anyone who doesn't want to spend a small fortune on hi-tech polymers. But once I tried a BlueChip, I couldn’t go back. The feel is smoother, the attack is cleaner, and I just play with more confidence. For me, they're worth the money. If you’re thinking about one, a pro tip: if you can wait until the holidays, BlueChip often does free laser engraving at Christmas, and sometimes they’ll even throw in a small leather pouch and free shipping. The downside is that demand is intense right now. Between Billy Strings and Bryan Sutton making the TP-48 picks famous, custom orders are often delayed or paused entirely. One more wrinkle in my pick story. I do own a genuine tortoise shell pick, and I use it exclusively when I play these days. There is something subtly different about the feel that I genuinely love. But I want to be very clear about this: I did not buy it. I found it in an old guitar case at my former guitar shop and decided to put it to work rather than let it sit in a drawer. I'll use it until I lose it or it breaks. I’m firmly opposed to the modern trade in endangered tortoise shell. If you’re going to use one, make sure it is a documented antique and legally sourced. Please.
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