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The Most Underrated Piece of Guitar/Bass Gear? You’ll Miss It Most When It’s Gone.

  • person Ariel Dancziger
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Crying guitarist with broken guitar next to a collapsed stand. Highlights the risk of cheap gear. Promotes CFG BunnyNest stand.

You’ve got a pedalboard that looks like it belongs in a NASA control room. Your amp tone could summon the gods—or at least terrify the neighbor’s dog. Your cables are braided, your strap is slick and stylish AF, and your tuner glows like a spaceship.

But your guitar stand?
It’s the same busted metal gremlin you’ve had since high school. The one that folds like a wet pool noodle and has all the visual appeal of a rusty lawn chair at a yard sale.

Let’s be real: most guitarists treat their stand like an afterthought. Some weird necessary evil that just exists to keep your axe off the floor long enough for you to ignore it again. But what if your stand didn’t suck?
What if it was sleek, sexy, reliable, and—dare we say—actually enjoyable to carry?

Enter the BunnyNest.
This ain’t your daddy’s clunker. It’s the collapsible, lightweight, ultra-portable guitar stand you didn’t know you needed—but now won’t shut up about. Designed by folks who actually play (that’s us), not some random dude who thinks guitars only belong in classrooms.

Stick around. We’re about to expose why your current stand is trash, how the BunnyNest saves your tone AND your back, and why this tiny piece of gear might be the MVP of your setup.

 

CFG BunnyNest vs Regular guitar stand

 


 

Why Guitar Stands Are the Cockroach of Gear (and Not in a Good Way)

They’re everywhere. They survive everything. They’re usually ugly, cheap, and somehow multiplying in the darkest corners of your gear closet.

We’re talking about your janky guitar stand.

You’ve probably owned at least three—none of which you actually like. One wobbles like it’s trying to start a mosh pit. Another has a leg missing but you still keep it “just in case.” And the third? That’s the one with the weird foam padding that's slowly disintegrating into black dust all over your bass.

Most stands are designed like they were made by someone who’s heard of guitars, but has never played one. They’re big when they should be compact, they’re fragile when they should be stable, and they’re somehow heavier than your cab but less reliable than your bassist’s memory.

You wouldn’t accept that from your pedalboard. Or your amp. So why put up with it for the one thing that holds your baby when you’re not holding it?

Guitar stands are one of those pieces of gear that people assume are “all the same.”
Spoiler: they’re not.

The wrong one can ruin your setup, stress your finish, trip your bandmate, or just straight-up snap under pressure like a pop-punk lyric. And trust us—you will blame yourself when your guitar takes a nosedive during soundcheck.

 

Overhead shot of a messy rehearsal space with a bass guitar lying awkwardly on a wooden floor, tangled in cables and surrounded by beat-up, rusted stand legs. Bold white text across the center reads "THIS IS NOT A VIBE." The image visually highlights the chaos and lack of care that comes from not using a proper stand. Perfect contrast to the clean, secure experience of the BunnyNest guitar stand from CFG (Cable-Free Guitar), designed to cradle your instrument like it deserves — no drama, no damage.

 


 

Introducing the BunnyNest – The Stand That Stands Alone

 

Built for Players, Not Storage Rooms

The BunnyNest wasn’t whipped up in some corporate cubicle by a dude in a tie who still calls a Stratocaster “the pointy one.” This stand was designed by people who actually gig, record, rehearse, and accidentally leave their gear in the backseat for three days. (We see you.)

It folds flatter than your uncle’s opinions on jazz.
It clocks in at just under a pound—lighter than your pedal tuner, heavier than your excuses for not bringing a stand.
And it fits in your gig bag’s front pocket like it’s been training for it since birth.

Translation: You’ll actually want to bring it with you.
Set it up in seconds. Break it down with one hand while the other’s holding a taco. No levers, no knobs, no drama. Just unfold, place your axe, and vibe.

Acoustic, Electric, Bass, Banjo? All Welcome.

The BunnyNest doesn’t discriminate.
It’s like the Switzerland of guitar stands—neutral, chill, and universally loved.

Got a jumbo acoustic with a belly like a beer fridge? Cool.
Shredding on a headless metal machine? Works.
Funky-shaped boutique bass that cost more than your car? The BunnyNest holds it all—without judgment or weird stares.

This stand hugs your instrument gently but firmly—like a bro-hug from someone who doesn’t do hugs but respects the moment.

Durability That Doesn’t Feel Like a Gym Workout

Some stands are built like tanks. Which sounds cool until you have to carry one three city blocks after a gig where the only parking was in a different ZIP code.

The BunnyNest flips that idea on its soft foam head. It’s tough enough to handle your heaviest bass, but light enough that you’ll forget you packed it—until you thank yourself for doing so.

The materials? Bombproof. The construction? Tight. The energy? “Let’s freaking go.”

Oh—and no dumb claws, weird arms, or spring-loaded trip hazards. Just a clean, stable A-frame that does its job without asking for applause. (Though it does deserve a slow clap.)

 

Close-up image showing the lower halves of a black electric bass and a natural-finish acoustic guitar, both proudly seated on sleek BunnyNest guitar stands by CFG (Cable-Free Guitar). The background is a cheering crowd, slightly blurred to keep the spotlight on the gear. Text across the bottom reads "THE REAL STAR OF THE SETUP." The scene makes it clear: the BunnyNest isn’t just a stand — it’s the unsung hero of your rig.

 


 

Real Talk from Real Players

We could go on all day about how the BunnyNest is the unicorn of guitar stands, but let’s pass the mic to some real-world gear nerds who’ve already made the switch.

 


 

“This is one of the sturdier stands I have found so far for my beloved Tele. It folds up nicely and fits into the outer pocket of my case.”
Monica L.
Monica’s got taste—and now, she’s got a stand that doesn’t rock like a drunk uncle every time she walks by.

 


 

“Folds up and fits in my guitar bag with plenty of room for cords and straps. Other stands with the long neck holder seem to fall over, but this keeps my bass firmly snug and doesn’t even move on carpet.”
Anonymous stand savior
If it doesn’t slip on carpet, it’s basically a ninja. A strong, silent, bass-holding ninja.

 


 

“I had tried one of the X-shaped wooden stands... this beats it in every way: lighter, more compact, less expensive, and so versatile that it can support almost any string instrument.”
Oliver K.
RIP to the overpriced wood stand. BunnyNest just took its lunch money and its gig.

 


 

The people have spoken—and they’re not just happy. They’re buying extras, ditching their old stands, and writing love letters in the form of 5-star reviews. When was the last time your guitar stand got a standing ovation?

 

Three customer reviews displayed in a side-by-side layout, each featuring a photo of different instruments — including a Telecaster, a black bass, and a group of acoustic guitars — all resting securely on the BunnyNest guitar stand from CFG (Cable-Free Guitar). Reviewers highlight the stand’s portability, stability on various surfaces, and its ability to support multiple instrument types. The testimonials praise the BunnyNest for being lightweight, compact, and reliable, reinforcing its role as a must-have piece of gear for guitar and bass players alike.

 


 

Why You’ll Regret Not Having One (Until It’s Too Late)

Let’s set the scene: You lean your guitar against the amp “just for a second.” You turn to adjust your pedalboard, maybe sip your drink, and then—CRACK.

Your beloved six-string just took a stage dive, and the only one to blame is you and that half-assed balancing act you thought would “probably be fine.”

We’ve all done it.
But here’s the thing: gravity is undefeated.
It doesn’t care how expensive your guitar is, how rare your finish is, or how chill the venue vibes are.

And while you’re sitting there staring at a busted headstock or a gnarly dent thinking, “Why didn’t I just get a decent stand?”—let us remind you:

The BunnyNest costs twenty-nine bucks.
That’s less than a set of boutique strings, or three fancy coffees, or one tragically overpriced beer at a stadium gig.

For $29.99, you get a stand that:

  • Folds flat
  • Travels light
  • Holds steady
  • Works with damn near any guitar or bass
  • Doesn’t ask for attention, but earns your respect

It’s not a luxury—it’s protection.
Because while you can risk your $2,000 guitar on a $9 drugstore stand or no stand at all… why would you?

The BunnyNest won’t just save your guitar. It’ll save your ass.

 

Split-screen image comparing two guitar stands. On the left, a blurry electric guitar appears to be falling off a flimsy, generic metal stand on a plain wooden floor. On the right, three guitars—a bass, electric, and acoustic—stand proudly on BunnyNest guitar stands from CFG (Cable-Free Guitar) on a well-lit stage. Bold text reads: "$29.99: ONE HOLDS YOUR GUITAR. THE OTHER HOLDS REGRET." The image cleverly underscores the reliability and professionalism of the BunnyNest compared to cheap alternatives.

 


 

Your Guitar Deserves Better (And So Do You)

Look, you already know this. You don’t need a flowchart or a sponsored YouTube unboxing to tell you what your instincts are screaming:

“Stop trusting your guitar to gravity and hope.”

It’s time to ditch the clunky floor scrap you’ve been calling a stand and upgrade to something that actually fits your life, your gear, and your bag.

The BunnyNest is light, tight, and ready to rock:

  • Folds down flatter than your first attempt at sweep picking
  • Fits in your gig bag without a fight
  • Handles acoustics, electrics, basses, banjos
  • And costs less than your last Uber to rehearsal

This isn’t some luxury flex. It’s the gear move your future self will thank you for.

Because let’s be real:
Your guitar’s not just a tool. It’s your baby, your weapon, your emotional support plank.

So treat it right. Give it the stand it deserves.
👉 Get yourself a BunnyNest and stop living dangerously.

 

Four instruments — a banjo, electric bass, electric guitar, and acoustic guitar — stand confidently on BunnyNest guitar stands from CFG (Cable-Free Guitar), neatly arranged on a stage with ambient lighting and amps in the background. The bold white text above and below reads: "STOP LEANING YOUR GUITAR AGAINST THE AMP LIKE A SAVAGE." The image playfully shames bad habits while spotlighting the sleek and secure design of the BunnyNest as the civilized choice.

comment 2 comments

R
Robert
calendar_today

@Ken_Mann I have a Bunny Nest and a Squier J bass and it fits perfectly

K
Ken Mann
calendar_today

My jazz bass will slip side ways in most stands, because of the body shape. How does your stand compensate for that?

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