BLACK ACOUSTIC PICK - MED STANDARD

$9.00

10ea One Pack

The Black Acoustic Flower Of Life Pick uses the highest quality celluloid and craftsmanship to create a pick that plays with a snappy attack and clear sound and good variance in volume. Plenty highs, mids and just the right amount of lows. This is my favorite pick for rapid fire strumming!

Quantity:
Add To Cart

10ea One Pack

The Black Acoustic Flower Of Life Pick uses the highest quality celluloid and craftsmanship to create a pick that plays with a snappy attack and clear sound and good variance in volume. Plenty highs, mids and just the right amount of lows. This is my favorite pick for rapid fire strumming!

10ea One Pack

The Black Acoustic Flower Of Life Pick uses the highest quality celluloid and craftsmanship to create a pick that plays with a snappy attack and clear sound and good variance in volume. Plenty highs, mids and just the right amount of lows. This is my favorite pick for rapid fire strumming!

My acoustic guitar go to pick, the Black Acoustic Pick is a standard medium gauge pick great for rhythm strumming and playing single notes. It has a very balanced feel and is used by many great guitar players such as Mike Stern, Pat Metheny and Santana. They sound great using the point but if you really want to go for a fat single note tone they can be flipped to use the other two points. The pick os also flexible enough to bend slightly to increase stiffness for single not performance tone. - Todd Mosby

“Celluloid is the original tortoiseshell substitute—it’s remarkably close in feel, timbre, and appearance with even greater flexibility. Its ability to bend and return to its original shape is uncanny. Using the highest quality celluloid with our precise craftsmanship to create a pick that plays smoothly with a snappy attack and a clear, round tone.

Celluloid is a trade name, like Band-Aid or Kleenex, but the term has been generically used for many years to reference a type of plastic material invented in the mid-1800s. It was used to make a variety of objects that are now collectibles until about 1940. It is a product of cellulose dinitrate blended with pigments, fillers, camphor, and alcohol to make a unique synthetic material categorized as a plastic. Most people recognize the pale yellow pieces with graining that are meant to simulate ivory as celluloid these days. Celluloid was often referred to as “French Ivory” in its heyday…” Written by Pamela Wiggins