Premier Guitar features affiliate links to help support our content. We may earn a commission on any affiliated purchases.

Elephant Foot Risers Announces Pedalboard Risers

Elephant Foot Risers Announces Pedalboard Risers

Fitted and non-fitted risers and frames designed to work with popular effects pedals and pedalboards.


Designed to provide an improved system for elevating effects pedals, the product line includes a broad array of options that will fit almost any pedal and pedalboard. Strong, stable, and lightweight, Elephant Foot Risers are designed for gigging musicians who need a reliable and road-worthy solution for improving their pedalboards.

The line features fitted and non-fitted risers and frames that can make your pedalboard as solid, secure, and streamlined as possible – without forcing you to sacrifice your favorite pedals or compromise on your routing preferences.

Features

  • No more accidental pedal stomps, no more pedal wobble, no more sloppy pedal boards!
  • Works with all popular brands
  • Easy and neat cable routing and pedal attachment options
  • Strong, yet lightweight
  • Versatile - use on wood, composite or metal pedalboards
  • Excellent value! Prices starting at only $4.99.

Intro to Elephant Foot Risers

Elephant Foot Risers are priced from $4.99 to $12.99. For more information, please visit elephantfootrisers.com.


Related Articles Around the Web

Pedals, pedals, and more pedals! Enter Stompboxtober Day 13 for your shot at today’s pedal from Electro-Harmonix!

Read MoreShow less

With its ability to dial in custom reverb, delay, and chorus settings without needing any extra equipment and intuitive looper and Bluetooth audio functions, the TAG3 C is designed to make it easier than ever to write, practice, and perform.

Read MoreShow less

John Mayer Silver Slinky Strings feature a unique 10.5-47 gauge combination, crafted to meet John's standards for tone and tension.

Read MoreShow less

For the first time in the band’s history, the Dawes lineup for Oh Brother consisted of just Griffin and Taylor Goldsmith (left and right).

Photo by Jon Chu

The folk-rock outfit’s frontman Taylor Goldsmith wrote their debut at 23. Now, with the release of their ninth full-length, Oh Brother, he shares his many insights into how he’s grown as a songwriter, and what that says about him as an artist and an individual.

I’ve been following the songwriting of Taylor Goldsmith, the frontman of L.A.-based, folk-rock band Dawes, since early 2011. At the time, I was a sophomore in college, and had just discovered their debut, North Hills, a year-and-a-half late. (That was thanks in part to one of its tracks, “When My Time Comes,” pervading cable TV via its placement in a Chevy commercial over my winter break.) As I caught on, I became fully entranced.

Read MoreShow less