• Each WEDGE comes uncompressed and in prime condition! The Wedges in the photo will be exactly what you get.
  • Great for spot treating sound on walls in your studio or office - For use in recording studios, control rooms, Offices home studios, home entertainment theaters, Home Offices
  • 24 Pack covers 24 square feet - Each tile is 1 square foot of 1 inch thick acoustic wedge
  • For professional acoustic control, sound dampening, acoustic treatment, noise reduction - Reduce waves, reverb and flutter echoes in smaller to medium sized rooms.
  • MADE IN USA - Passes the CA TECHNICAL BULLETIN CAL 117-2013: Requirements. This is the Procedure and Apparatus for Testing the Smolder Resistance of Materials Used in Upholstered Furniture. This product, passes the requirements tested in the CAL 117-2013 procedure

Placed these bad boys on cardboard and command stripped the cardboard to the wall so it wont leave marks. Only thing I need is more of these!!!

These really soak high frequencies. I have a large sound system with many Klipsch speakers. I love the sound of my Klipsch speakers, but lately I have had problems with my ears. Ear pain mostly but nothing severe, it's mostly mild and not too constant. I decided to buy these foam panels since I have read that high and mid high frequencies are what our ears are really sensitive to. On many websites I have read that cheap foam like this is bogus and that you are not going to get anything out of it. Now I know for sure that a lot of the so called audiophile world if full of pretentious elitism. After installing nine out of the twelve panels I was ready to try them out. I had Oasis's "Be Here Now" in the CD player and I was hesitant to use that as my first test. "Be Here Now" is a loud record, it will assault your ears with lots of treble. I was blown away by what I heard, the record was tamed! It sounded so warm, so balanced, it was no longer loud fuzzy music. So yeah these really work.

I bought 3 sets to put on my wall in front of my editing station. I'm a video pro, not necessarily an audio pro, but I do have ears. The main reason I got these was to add a bit of professional looking decoration to my office. I can tell they help with the acoustics also.

These are great for small rooms, they are thin, but with the right amount of them, pending how much reduction you want or need, they will serve its purpose. I like the product for its price & will buy again,.. I need more than I thought. they were purchased purely for cosmetic reasons in my studio, & they do help if placed in the right spots. Until I realized my studio is an acoustic nightmare... Their firm & not flimsy. They've a nice cush as well as Very lightweight. Their easy to mount on the walls with a single tpin in the middle or spray glue, there are many kinds & brands but fabric glue spray is pretty strong stuff, just be careful not to damage your wall or the foam as they might not come off so easily, tho i recommend Tpins if your able to do so. Fast shipping, they came well before the estimated day of delivery. NOTE, the product page is a tad misleading, there is a choice of color option, this is not something that stands out very well, by default your getting flat ice blue, not what's in the photo. You'll need to select that the drop down box, I was not paying attention and when I received the product I had only the solid ice blue color instead of the gray/blue & that was what I wanted, so I didn't look for options, I assumed this was the product & I liked it as was, I was satisfied with the color.. I browsed a while seeing many with multiple colors, "red & black" etc. Until i came across the blue/gray. So just be aware of that really. So your not crying and using spray paint like I did (totally doable), don't repeat my mistakes,

These are decent panels. They're manufactured well. They won't correct standing bass (you'll need bass traps for that) but for high frequency reflections, they do the job effectively. When it came time to affix these to the walls, I poured over YouTube videos and discussion threads. I needed to avoid damage to my rented walls. I was primarily concerned with how to get whatever adhesive I used to stay fastened to the porous foam. The goal was to use Command Strips to fasten to the wall and use some other adhesive to create a bonding surface on the foam to attach the Command Strips to. I tried tacky glue (fail: never dries), super glue (fail: eats the foam without creating a bond) and duct tape (fail: sticks at first, then peels off easily after 5 minutes). The final solution was much easier than expected: just use Command Strips. They work perfectly on their own. First attach 2 strips to the upper corners of a foam square, pressing them into the foam as firmly as you can for about 10 seconds. This creates a PERMANENT bond between the strips and the foam. This bond is so secure that attempting to remove the strip will cause a perfectly strip-sized portion of the foam to come off. Then simply press the foam squares to the wall. Done. Works perfectly. The foam stays attached and finishing the job is QUICK. Excellent value for budget acoustic treatment.

Looks good and helps keep the eco in my room down. I attached them to a big piece of cardboard with spray adhesive, then used command strips to attach the cardboard to the wall to avoid damage to the paint since I rent.

1 inch thick foam panels have about 3/4 inch grooves. These are light panels and are flexible enough for corners. I attached mine to the apartment wall using Velcro. For each panel I cut a 1 inch square of Velcro Industrial Strength and adhered the Velcro sticky part of the felt side to the acoustic panel. The hook part of the Velcro could have been attached to the wall, but Instead Poked a flat thumbtack. I used two squares of Velcro for each panel.

This is a great value for the money. I recently upgraded my amp. With the increased power noticed some reflections and sensed the sound stage, although an amazing improvement could be further improved. After consulting Robert Harley’s book, “The Complete Guide to High-End Audio” I began experimenting with my AV8802a processor audio settings and room acoustics to extract each ounce of pure goodness I knew the Emotiva XPA-DR3 possessed. To reduce reflections, I removed by Blu-ray/DVD shelves from the listening area and installed 60 12-inch square acoustic foam panels from Foamily on the front wall. I also pushed back the flat panel television and center channel and slightly pulled forward the left and right speakers, so they were not obstructed by my Salamander cabinet. The acoustic panels made an incalculable improvement in sound stage and imaging. I now listen to my music--most of which is encoded in ALAC format--in stereo mode and it sounds even better than listening in 5 channel virtual stereo. What a huge difference these simple adjustments made in sound stage!

These are surprisingly good at isolating sound and preventing reverberation of sound off of the walls. I purchased a TON of these to outfit a room in my apartment for the sole purpose of a YouTube/Twitch/Film recording studio. As such I needed a good solution that isolated the sound from bouncing off of the walls and causing an echo into my microphone. These did the trick and well. Despite being only 1" thick these work and I don't feel that it's necessary to upgrade to a 2" foam panel.

Omg! I couldn’t believe this!!! So I have very noisy neighbors above me. The whole day footsteps sound like their about to break the floor. I left many notes in their apartment and nothing changes AND... I have a 6 month baby that wakes up every night because of them. Unfortunately their old people and i can’t get mad at them because of their age, so I decided to look for solutions to fix this and cane across this. I just placed some under the baby’s crib because I didn’t know how it would work and I placed some by the door because I had left over. Let me tell you that OMG! No noise (and I only bought one pack) the baby slept all night long and me and my husband finally got rest. I waited this morning for them to make noise but nothing, all the noise was now in the living room and kitchen but not in our room