Ukulele Sock

Ukulele Sock

While our capos may work just fine on most ukuleles, a soprano ukulele or other uke with a very thin neck will need this sock.   This rubber sock slides over the capo's pinchpad and stays in place.  This will provide the extra thickness needed to make our capos work perfectly on any ukulele. 

This will also provide extra tension on any guitar where a bit of extra tension is needed.

While our capos may work just fine on most ukuleles, a soprano ukulele or other uke with a very thin neck will need this sock.   This rubber sock slides over the capo's pinchpad and stays in place.  This will provide the extra thickness needed to make our capos work perfectly on any ukulele. 

This will also provide extra tension on any guitar where a bit of extra tension is needed.


While our capos may work just fine on most ukuleles, a soprano ukulele or other uke with a very thin neck will need this sock.   This rubber sock slides over the capo's pinchpad and stays in place.  This will provide the extra thickness needed to make our capos work perfectly on any ukulele. 

This will also provide extra tension on any guitar where a bit of extra tension is needed.

Customer Reviews

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J
Jim S.
Just the Right Thing to Fit Higher End Ukuleles

Over the past few months, I have purchased three Thalia capos to be paired with high end ukuleles I have: (1) Cocobolo Ukuleles 5-String Baritone (Green Angel Wing w/Gold); (2) Kanile’a DR-T Custom/Curly Redwood & Cocobolo (Hawaiian Koa Celtic Knot w/Gold); and (3) Ko’olau T-100 SP/Adirondack Spruce & Master Grade Koa (Hawaiian Koa Celtic Knot w/Blackened Chrome). While the Cocobolo Ukuleles baritone has a rounder neck such that the harder inserts that are included in the Thalia kit provide a perfect fit, the Kanile’a and the Ko’olau, both being custom top-end instruments, have thinner necks, such that the provided Thalia inserts (even the hard ones) are “just at the edge” of a consistently “confident” barre — it was really at the knife-edge. But, the addition of the light “Ukulele Sock” to the “trigger” of the capo adds just the slightest additional grip-pressure to add that “barre confidence” without turning the capo into a clamp. It’s like the difference between the pressure one applies if you are an experienced and confident barre chord player versus the pressure a new-to-barre-chords player might apply. . . . Perhaps a long review for something that literally costs (as of this writing) $1.00. In other words, if you are buying one of the Thalia $85/$95 capos for a $4,000.00+ ukulele (which I was with both the Kanile’a and Ko’olau ukuleles), for a high-end uke with perhaps a thinner neck, go ahead and “splurge” to get one (or five) of these $1.00 “socks” to see if your capo might fit your instrument just a bit more cleanly.

T
Tim N.
Mexican greenheart

Absolutely awesome capo. Performs perfect on banjos and ukuleles!
Looks amazing amazing amazing. Works so well one handed.
I’ve ordered another already.
Can’t praise the service and the company enough. Love them.

D
Doug S.
I need some help on this please

Hi Chris and Thalia, I am really enjoying the Chinese Dragon capo! I am having a problem with it though: Despite the addition of the ‘ukulele sock, my Ike’s neck is so thin it doesn’t quite grip the fretboard tightly enough (until way up the neck). It is nonetheless gorgeous. Do you have suggestions to help?
My daughter loves the capo as well. The uke was commissioned by me for her when she was a baby (a little dragon girl born 2000 in China). I’d love to send u photos though of the w capo in use regardless. What is your email please? Mine is [****]
Aloha from Hawai’i! Doug Fitch

A
Arthur A.

Big Thank You !!

Y
Yves
Useful "trigger shoe"!

This inexpensive little addition to the capo works great on ukes and other thin-necked instruments. It can also add enough leverage to permit carrying your capo on the headstock of some full size guitars.