Delay is one of the foundational effects of the electric guitar: first popularized by tape echoes of the 50s/60s, then by analog delays with their warm and slightly grainy character, before becoming ultra-precise with the digital era. The Mirror Image follows this lineage by combining these three aesthetics within a pedal format designed for the pedalboard. The idea is simple: to give you the right "echo flavor" depending on the song, while maintaining an immediate and inspiring user experience.
This delay pedal is made for guitarists (and more broadly any musician connected via 6.35mm Jack) who want to enrich their sonic signature without getting lost in menus. Beginners will easily achieve a slapback that adds depth to rockabilly, blues, or country parts. Intermediate players will appreciate the tempo-synced repeats to lock in dotted eighth note playing and create riffs that "dance" around the groove. Advanced users will exploit the modulation of repeats and mode variations to build soaring textures, post-rock, indie, ambient, worship, or wider modern leads.
In the studio, the Mirror Image allows placing the guitar in space, thickening a mono take, or making a motif more memorable. Live, the bypass with trails avoids abrupt cutoffs: your delays naturally decay, securing transitions and maintaining a professional sound.
The heart of the Mirror Image lies in three modes (Digital, Analog, Tape), each offering two variations to broaden the palette without complicating use. The Digital mode aims for clear and precise repeats, perfect for rhythmic patterns and "to-the-millisecond" delays. The Analog mode generally provides a softer feel, with repeats that blend into the mix, highly appreciated for solos and organic accompaniments. The Tape mode evokes the lively and slightly fluctuating character of vintage machines, ideal for "cinematic" depth and enveloping atmospheres.
The pedal also encourages you to play with repeat modulation, a powerful approach to create movement without adding another modulation pedal. And if you like syncopated pulses, the ability to set the delay to dotted eighth notes makes accessing immediately musical rhythmic patterns easy, without complicated calculations.
Regarding integration, the Mirror Image accepts power from a 9V battery or a 9V DC adapter with center-negative polarity. Its anodized aluminum construction is designed for regular use, on stage or in rehearsal.
The Mirror Image stands out with an approach ranging from subtle delay (a short echo that adds thickness, very effective for "enlarging" a rhythm guitar) to wide and atmospheric repeats capable of filling the space between notes. In slapback mode, you get immediate presence: the playing feels closer, more alive, without masking the pick attack. On longer settings, the delay becomes a compositional tool: repeats add a second melodic line or create a harmonic bed when you modulate their character.
The "trails" behavior is a real musical plus: you can cut the effect while letting the phrase's end fade naturally, avoiding abrupt stops and making the whole more fluid. The result: an expressive delay pedal designed to serve both groove and atmosphere, with modes covering the major colors of modern echo.