I wonder why so many manufacturers of audio-quality capacitors are skipping the highly-common-value-in-the-E6-series '15', as in 0.15uF and 1.5uF. The former is quite common in vacuumtubed poweramps, and not having a 0.15 forces us to use a 0.22 (or combine a 0.1 and a 0.047 for even-more money!), thereby altering the frequency poles the designer chose.
Any reason, Danny?
BTW, your prices are quite low for teflon-film caps and not so much more than those for, eg, TRT DynamiCaps.
(For those of you not familiar with 'E6', 'E12', etc., it's an industry-standard method of getting from 1n to 10n in 6 or 12 (or 24, etc.) steps. The E6 values are 1, 1.5, 2.2, 3.3, 4.7, and 6.8. The 12-series adds 1.2, 1.8, 2.6, 3.8, 5.6, and 8.3.)