Focal Stellia Closed-Back Headphones - Official Thread


Good Morning! Have a quick first impression,

Just got the Stellia in last night, the unboxing experience was really fun. If you have ever bought a higher end luxury car(BMW M /Mercedes AMG & up) and it came with a fancy welcome kit this had that same vibe.

My girlfriend enjoyed the unboxing presentation and attention to detail on all of the leatherette covered packaging although got a bit concerned over the Beryllium warning pamphlet.

I was tired from a pretty long workday last night not ending til about 10pm so waited on listening until this morning and got up right before the sun to have total quiet for a few hours.

My reference album I almost always start new gear with is a DVD of Radiohead’s “In Rainbows - Live From The Basement” recorded in Maida Vale Studios. It is on YouTube if you want to check it out but there is a big difference with the 32-bit/48 AC3 Stream on the DVD if you can find a copy or good DVD RIP.

Initial impression running full balanced Schiit Modius into a THX AAA 887 is…just amazing.

This is weird to say, I will be honest that halfway through the track “Nude” I had a deep emotional response and started to tear up for a moment, this never happens. It was that feeling when you have heard a song for 12-13 years but with this setup it feels so intimate that you are inside the music and the veil between artist and audience is gone for a moment, borderline hallucinatory but in a good way.

I am hyper-crtitical when it comes to tech and value/performance and with my setup running about ~$2800 for the DAC/AMP/HP I am relieved more than anything else about how good this sounds. I know in time as I learn the boundaries of what this can do and the “new car smell”(literally) begins to fade that I have great reference headphones to explore other front-end gear. Next on the list is a Musical Paradise MP-701 MKII balanced Tube Pre-Amp.

Will put together a full review once I have spent some time with the Stellia.

Have a great weekend and if you are in the U.S., be safe with your fireworks :slight_smile:

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Great write up.

That live performance of In Rainbows is one of my favorites (I’m a fan of Radiohead)!

Glad you’re enjoying them so much.

Cheers!

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Congratulations on your new Stellias! They are truly spectacular. That emotional response is what we are all seeking in music. It sounds like you have crossed over from just “listening” to that track to truly feeling it. Magic.

Beautiful photo as well. Enjoy. :headphones:

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A post was merged into an existing topic: My first impressions of buying Kennerton Russian Made headphones

Excellent impressions @Anhedonius. Those Stellia’s are beautiful. The look has really grown on me.

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Hey everyone, a quick thank you for the positive feedback. It is a bit daunting to share somewhat intimate experiences on the internet and to me this community continues to be positive and supportive which is hard to find considering how critical we have to inherently be as Hi-fi enthusiasts.

A preface before asking some questions to you all:

I am spending the near future playing with my existing AMP/DAC combinations to get a feel for how the Stellia responds as far as Tonality, Detail Retrieval and Separation/Sound-stage go. I am usually trying to find a balance between Warm/Detailed/Dark/Punchy when it comes to sound characteristics and have found it hard to check the right boxes.

As you can see from the above picture I am using the Schiit Modius DAC and Monoprice THX AAA 887 Balanced amp. While I am sold on the Modius with the AK4493/LME49724 balanced output and threw away the box within 2 days and no thought of returning it, however I am not entirely sold on the 887 with the Stellia and the 887 is still within its return policy for a few more weeks.

I find the 887 to feel more like lab equipment that is giving a cold but detailed representation of what I feed it, which I respect from a technical standpoint but I wouldn’t call it “fun”.

Question 1:

Before I start throwing my checkbook at the computer screen and continue my grail quest , what would be some recommendations to look into Balanced if possible headphone amplifiers that would compliment the Stellias detail retrieval capacity and warm-neutral tone without being harsh?

Some extra context:

  • I have a rough budget of about ~$2000 set to put towards a headphone amp, if I can spend less then great but if I need to spend more I can make the exception if it is absolutely needed.

  • I only have experience with Solid-State but am not against tube or hybrid tube/solid if detail retrieval is not compromised beyond an acceptable degree

  • I like balanced so far and if I can use the headphone amp as a pre-amp into a balanced speaker amp that would be awesome if possible but if I need to use SE/RCA that is ok too.

Some candidates that have caught my eye:

  • SPL Phonitor X Solid-state HP amp w/pre-out - 2500

  • HeadAmp GS-X mini - 1800

  • ZMF Pendant Tube HP amp - 2000

  • Monoprice Monolith Liquid Platinum hybrid Tube/Solid State - 650

  • PrimaLuna Evo 100 integrated amp w/headphone out(would double as near-field speaker amp) - 2300

  • Musical Paradise MP-701 MK2 Balanced Tube Preamp(would be between Modius and amp) - 700

  • Rupert Neve Designs Fidelice Precision Headphone Amplifier - 1200

  • Feliks Elise MKII Tube Headphone Amp - 1500

  • Woo Audio WA2 Headphone tube amp - 1200

  • Woo Audio WA6 - SE Tube Headphone amp - 1200

  • Woo Audio WA22 Balanced HP amp & Preamp - 2500

I appreciate you taking the time to read this far and any feedback is greatly appreciated!

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I technically haven’t heard any of the amps listed or the Stellia, but I do own a pair of Rupert Neve Designs RNHP’s and they are essentially the same as the Fidelice branded amp but with different case work. Those are only $499.

@Rhodey owns both the Stellia and the RNHP, so maybe he could give you his take.

@TylersEclectic owns the Stellia and the Phonitor XE, so he could give you impressions on that pairing.

I’m glad you’re enjoying the Stellias. :+1:t4:

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I use the Stellia+Pxe as my home office headphone rig. (See Current Set-Up Pics - Official Picture Thread - #460 by cwichura for photo.) I have been very happy with the combination. I do not consider it sterile or harsh at all. The SPL headamps have a reputation for being pretty neutral to the source yet still “musical” (I hate that descriptive for head-fi stuff).

Of course, everyone is different, so the real solution is find a way to demo the SPL before purchasing, if you can. Or make sure the place you order from has an acceptable return policy.

The GS-X Mini has also been getting a lot of praise lately. I’ve never heard one, so can’t say if that’s the new-gear hypetrain or not. The SPLs are not hypetrain – they’ve been around a long time…

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Before getting into what I am about to say I greatly appreciate the feedback and PMs with insights into possible gear combinations I have received recently.

With a week having passed with the Stellia and averaging about 6-8 hours a day with them I unfortunately have initiated a return. The Stellia are phenomenal headphones and especially with what they are able to achieve with a closed-back design and are the only ones I have heard that trick my brain into thinking are in fact open and it’s just the world that magically became quiet.

With that being said, two reasons came up that prevented me from holding onto them them and I think they put me in the minority.

1.) I am about 6’5 and have a relatively big head & ears albeit somewhat proportional-ish , they do not fit in the Stellia comfortably no matter how hard I tried. This prevented listening sessions going longer than about an hour without getting uncomfortably sore without a break for 10-15 minutes. I researched possible replacement pads and couldn’t find any that had both an increased depth and ear-hole size that would make the Stellia a comfortable fit and not drastically alter the sound signature.

2.) Treble, from an engineering standpoint the Stellia are an amazing feat and push the boundaries of what a closed-back headphone can do. In my case, there is a crisp aspect to the treble that also made them quite fatiguing for me personally. I have more sensitive than average hearing( huge ears remember) and after trying the Stellia with about 6 different sources and even more forms of amplification in every combination possible the same brightness was unavoidable for me and I consistently needed to lower the volume to the point where it defeated the purpose of having a flagship $3000 headphone.

Using a car analogy, I have driven cars that I know from an engineering standpoint are simply great and achieve something entirely novel and push the benchmark forward for what a car can do but that doesn’t necessarily mean I could live with it as a daily driver. And while we are at it, also as a car analogy, there are many cars I can’t fit in comfortably anyways which makes them an immediate non-starter no matter how rose-tinted I can get about them.

For any prospective Stellia buyer, even though they were not for me, they might be perfect for you. I do not fault the Stellia on detail retrieval, sound-stage, dynamics and practically every aspect I compare headphones/loudspeakers by.

With that being said, as my grail quest continues I see a RAAL/Jotunheim R peaking over on the horizon. You don’t have to worry about earpad size if there aren’t any in the first place.

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I have large ears as well, and the Focal Clears that I own do have a small ear opening. I have to slightly ‘roll my ears’ into the cups, but it’s not as bad as it sounds. I can see how this would be an issue with larger ears than mine.

The RAAL is beloved by its owners so I think you should be happy with them.

Good luck with the SR1a, I hope it works out for you. :+1:t4:

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I am 6’3" and also have a relatively big head and ears, and I experienced the same problem. My solution was to take a stack of books and put them between the earpieces of the Stellias for a few days. Now they are very comfy.

I don’t have the same problem with the treble that you do, but you can easily cut back on that with some simple equalization.

My other problem with the Stellias was the cable. I found it too stiff and producing microphonics. I solved that with a Lavricables Master and am quite satisfied now.

I also have the Raal SR1a and find them to be a great complement to the Stellias, since the Raal are totally open, and the Stellias are quite closed.

Which ever way you go, you are experiencing the best that headphone technology has to offer!

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Different stokes for different folks. In my albeit brief time with the Stellias at a show, I thought they were nearly plush in comfort (not Empyrean level but really nice feeling). The Focal pads seem to “just” fit my ears. But having had a similar unhappy experience with the Campfire Audio Solaris IEMs, which would not stay put in my ears no matter what I did, I understand. I picked those up used, and had to resell them at a loss of about $100 – wish I’d gotten them from Headphones.com and relied on the return policy! Well, next time. Good luck with your quest!

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My experience with the Stellia has been nothing but positive. Across the board, the frequency response has superb clarity, detail, and depth. I’ve come to appreciate the virtues of closed back headphones, which allows the listener to get deeper into the recording.
This was really brought home while listening to a Reference Recordings Tchaikovsky’s 6th symphony. This symphony has tremendous dynamic contrasts, and the Stellia’s allow the listener to hear subtle details not normally revealed. The amazing thing is that even with the louder passages, one can still hear the subtle details clearly. The only other headphones that provided a similar experience were Stax SR-007, and the dynamic contrast from the Stellia is even better.
If one uses EQ, such as that provided by a DAC such as the RME ADI-2, one can smooth/flatten out the frequency response. IMHO, NO headphone is flat, and EQ done correctly can only improve a given headphones performance.
The output from the DAC goes to a Mjolnir Audio Pure Bipolar headphone amp. The Pure Bipolar does a much better job driving the Stellia.

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3 posts were merged into an existing topic: The Off Topic

After spending more time with the Stellia, I’m becoming more convinced than ever that these headphones are very special, amongst the very best there is at any price point.

The entire playback response, is amazing, from deep bass, life like midrange, and perhaps the best treble response I’ve ever come across in a headphone. These headphones manage to get the sound of brass instruments right, something almost no headphone does properly. I attribute this to the beryllium drivers. To me, the treble is accurate, which some folks categorize as too bright. Real live music has scads of bright treble. I think this is why brass instruments sound so right.

Would like to compare the Stellia to the Utopia at some point. Using a RME ADI-2 DAC, I can adjust most headphones to get a flat response, which is godsend. The Pure Bipolar amp does an amazing job driving the Stellia being fed from the ADI-2.

May actually hang on to this combo for the foreseeable future. (I know,right). :slight_smile:

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I agree entirely in regards to what you have highlighted, especially the way Brass instruments sound. On a specific 1965 recording of Malaguena on The Glory Of Spain -The Manhattan Pops there are really dramatic and emotional crescendos that were amazing on the Stellia to the point I went full eyes-closed “pretend armchair conductor” a la Bugs Bunny towards the end and had no Idea my girlfriend was next to me watching the whole thing.

I recently tried the Utopia with the Schiit Modius which is at least similar in chip to the RME without the EQ functionality although I mostly use a Schiit Loki passive EQ or soft-ware side through Roon. They are really similar from a tonal standpoint but the utopia is faster and can simply give more detail although I think the Stellia is remarkably close and closed-back, which to me is insane from a engineering standpoint.

I personally think any comparison of the Stellia vs an open-back TOTL headphone is a little unfair because how many bonus points the the Stellia deserves for noise isolation. If I have a computer nearby or Fan/AC with someone eating a bag of chips , that is going to affect my perceived micro/macro detail retrieval.

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Your point about the sound isolation with the closed back headphone is very valid. In order to enjoy open back headphones, the environment really needs to be quiet. With closed back headphones, low level background noise tends to not interfere with playback to the point it becomes annoying.

My decision to get the Stellia vice the Utopia was based on two items:

  1. The Stellia, being closed back, would naturally have better bass response, which would translate to dynamic contrast/slam.
  2. The drivers between the Utopia and Stellia are both beryllium, so I figured they would be very close sounding. The increased isolation provided by being closed back would more than make up for slight reduction in detail. Truth be told, the Stellia detail is outstanding to begin with.

Guess that’s why there are so many headphones available, as everyone has their own unique priorities for listening.

THe EQ in the ADI-2 does change impressions somewhat, as the five band EQ can adjust frequency deviations for any given headphone, which does change one’s perspective of the phones.

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Anyone know of replacement pads that are synthetic in material so I can workout with these cans versus messing up the super soft leather? I’ve currently demoted my Aeon 2 Closed to workout duties, but rather pack them up for traveling duties. First world problems, I know. Lol

Also, any Arche owners try the Bifrost 2 for DAC duties? I’m liking my Mojo as the DAC and am contemplating adding the Poly to it so I can control it from my listening position.

I used to own a pair of Elears, but I had problem with the comfort. The headband would start to hurt on the top of my head after just a short while. I had a hard time finding a way to wear them comfortably and eventually sold them.

Would the headband on the Stellia give me the same sort of problem, or did Focal improve the headband padding on this model?

Focal Stellia Review

Written by Chrono

Introduction

The Stellia is Focal’s flagship closed-back, dynamic driver headphone, and it was designed to deliver a high-end, acoustically-accurate listening experience both at-home, and on-the-go. As one of Focal’s top-of-the-line offerings, the Stellia is adorned with astonishingly premium materials and–I think more importantly–Focal’s best headphone acoustic technology.

With the Stellia’s retailing at a jaw-dropping $2,990 I think it’s safe to say the question of perceived value has been completely thrown at the window, and to be fair, that is a very subjective metric anyways. So, what I want to focus on in this review is sharing my experience with this beautiful headphone in hopes that it might be helpful for those wondering if this is the one for them.

Sources and Music Used in Listening Tests

The Amplifier/DACs used in this review were the SPL Phonitor XE (with built-in DAC), Grace Design SDAC + Topping A90, and the JDS Labs Element II connected via USB to my desktop computer. For the listening tests I used music from a wide variety of genres including Rock, Jazz, Classical, Acoustic, Hip-Hop, and latin. I played tracks from my own FLAC library as well as from Qobuz streaming service played via Roon (exclusive mode).

Packaging and Accessories

If I’m being honest, I’m not usually that interested in a product’s packaging or presentation, as I tend to focus more on performance. However, the Stellia’s packaging made for a delightful unboxing experience that was very reminiscent of that of luxury fashion products.

The box’s top cover is wrapped in a pleather that matches the Stellia’s visual design. Inside you are greeted with the Stellia inside traditional Focal hard-case (albeit in a chocolate-like color to match the headphone), and a fold-out box containing the cables, as well as a wallet with all the documentation for the headphone.

There are two cables included with the Stellia. Although they both terminate in dual-sided 3.5mm connectors on the headphone side, and are wrapped in a color that matches the Stellia’s colorway, they do vary in their length and terminations. One of the cables measures 1.2m in length and is intended for portable use, as it terminates in a 3.5mm jack. The second cable is fairly longer at 3m in length and terminates in a 4-pin balanced XLR connector. Now, whilst both cables look and feel rather nice, they are still fairly awkward and stiff for desktop use and I highly encourage the use of aftermarket cables if you find that the included ones get in the way too much.

Build Quality and Comfort

Aesthetically, the Stellia is a significant departure from the rest of Focal’s line-up. Whilst headphones like the Utopia, Clear, and now discontinued Elegia feature clean, simple designs, the Stellia instead looks and feels like a product that could have been made in collaboration with brands like Bally or Salvatore Ferragamo; using full-grain leather and metals that follow a rather striking Cognac and Mocha theme. From a structural standpoint, though, the Stellia’s design is identical to that of all the others in Focal’s family of headphones. The Stellia is constructed entirely out of metal, it feels remarkably well put-together, and there are no build flaws or loose parts that I can find on it. There really is no part of the Stellia’s build which I feel I can sincerely flaw, I find it to be a very reliable, and beautiful design. One thing I will note for the Stellia, however, is that because it is using genuine leather in a fairly light color, it is subject to discoloration and alterations over time as a result of its exposure to light, body oils, and just general usage–something worth keeping in mind if you are not particularly fond of patina on leather products.

Whilst not the most comfortable I have tried, the Stellia has been a pretty easy wear for me in day-long listening sessions. Straight out of the box, the clamp force was a little bit on the tighter side, but I did find that even after just a few hours of use they eased up quite nicely and the headphone’s weight is distributed pretty evenly. My only concern with the Stellia is that whilst they are pretty deep, I do find the inside area of the pads to be a little bit small, so users with larger ears might find contact with the inner sides to be somewhat annoying. Nonetheless, I do find the Stellia to be pretty comfortable, you just have to keep in mind that it does have a snug fit.

Sound

The Stellia shares a driver design that is almost identical to that of Focal’s esteemed flagship–the Utopia.

Housed inside the Stellia’s ear cups are Focal’s ‘M’-shaped pure Beryllium dome speaker drivers and as a closed-back headphone, it combats in-cup resonances and standing waves by using box-shaped diffusers that absorb and break up sound waves with a method that can be compared to that of acoustically-treated rooms. So, with its cutting edge acoustic technologies, how did the Stellia perform in my experience listening to it?

First Impressions

I will admit, that before listening to the Stellia myself, I had seen some frequency response measurements that worried me, as they looked a little bit odd. However, once I actually listened to them I did not find these headphones in particular to sound strange like the measurements suggested.

When I first sat down to listen to the Stellia, it immediately struck me as being this incredibly energetic headphone with outstanding technical performance. It presented music with a tonality that could be characterized by very present, slightly emphasized bass, rich mids, and highs that, although a little lacking in air, were well-tempered. As I will discuss briefly when diving into a more in-depth look at the different frequency response registers, I did find some quirks in the Stellia’s tonality when listening to it, but by and large these were very minor, and I felt like it did have a very enjoyable, warm balance overall.

Bass

The Stellia’s bass response feels extremely fast and well-defined, with a great ability for adequately texturing low tones. I found the Stellia to be significantly more articulate than the HD 820, and I felt as though it was even a little more nimble than headphones like the LCD-X in this region of the frequency response. For extension it reaches far down, almost all the way to 20hz. This gave the bass a very good sense of depth, and in this regard it’s really only outperformed by some of the planar-magnetic headphones I’ve listened to which are more capable when reproducing that 10hz-20hz rumble.

I do find that frequencies in the subbass region under 100hz are a little boosted for my preference, as they sit very close to the level suggested by the Harman Target Preference Curve, but I do think this added emphasis adds a “fun,” warm character to the Stellia that I think many listeners will enjoy. Moving on the mid and upper bass, I find it has a very good tuning on the Stellia, as I heard no bloats making the bass one-note-sounding, and it had a smooth, uncongested transition from the upper-bass into the lower mids. Altogether, when you combine its balanced tuning and precision, the stellia has, hands down, the best bass I have personally heard on a dynamic-driver headphone thus far; I just think it sounds extremely clean, but also exciting in the way it reproduces low tones.

Mids

Whilst it does have some of the same slight quirks I’ve heard on other Focal headphones, I still think the midrange on the Stellia sounds great and has a good tuning. The lower mids, particularly around 300hz-600hz seems to be ever so slightly elevated, which I find lends vocals a very full-sounding body and makes brass, woodwind, and string instruments in particular come through with a heightened tonal richness in their fundamental tones. Where I do find that the Stellia deviates a little bit from what I consider to be neutral or natural-sounding is in the upper midrange.

Like the Clear, the Stellia sees an elevation at around 1K, but also has a small rise at 2K. They are very subtle, but depending on the music and instruments you listen to they might become more apparent. I found that those peaks could add slightly nasal character vocals, and could make percussive instruments in particular sound a little boxy or metallic. At the same, I felt like those two elevations added a really satisfying emphasis to brass instruments’ overtones, which, for me, gave them a more realistic bite. Lastly, whilst it did not sound recessed, I did feel like there was an upper midrange dip at around 4K-4.5K, which took away some vocal presence and added a small emphasis to the nasal quality I mentioned. Still, these were very minor deviations and for the most part I would consider them to be nitpicks. Also worth mentioning is that, compared to the Clear, the Stellia did not sound to me as though it had that somewhat metallic character that listener’s have noted on some Focal headphones, and seems more transparent in that regard.

Highs

I would describe the Stellia’s treble range as mostly smooth, with no one frequency band jumping at you or coming through harshly. I did notice, though, two very minor bumps in this region of the frequency response. The first one was this small rise at 6.5K that added a little bit of glare in the lower treble. Then there was also a slight peak at 8K that placed a stress on consonant sounds. Mind you, it wasn’t a large enough peak to make the treble come through as piercing or sharp, but it did add just a bit of sibilance here and there; which could prove distracting on certain tracks.

I think that if there’s one thing that disappoints me in the treble region for the Stellia, is that it’s treble extension is fairly poor, and has some pretty noticeable roll-off in the top end. For me, there was a noticeable lack of air, so the highs didn’t glisten as much as I would have liked them to and I felt like instruments occasionally missed some of those upper treble harmonics. Additionally, I feel as though this made the Stellia sound a little more closed in and just a little less resolving, however this was something I did find could be amended with a little EQ. Apart from the lack of air, though, I do like the Stellia’s inoffensive, and well-balanced tuning in the highs.

Resolution

For detail retrieval and overall sense of clarity, I feel like the Stellia delivers outstanding performance. In all registers of the frequency response, but particularly in the bass and mids, the Stellia presents a very clean image of the music that surfaces all the tonal and structural nuances in different instrument and vocal lines. I think that for internal resolution, the Stellia is a step-up from the Clear, is slightly ahead of HD 820, and is about on-par with the HD 800 S which I find remarkable for a closed-back headphone.

Soundstage, Imaging, and Layering

Whilst I feel as though the Stellia has immaculate imaging that precisely discerns the directionality of the different instruments and elements in a recording, it’s not a particularly spacious headphone, as its soundstage is very lacking in sense of distance. Despite the small stage it has to work with, though, the Stellia does maintain a fantastic instrument separation that lends the instrument and vocal lines composing complex music passages a distinct place of their own. Needless to say, the soundscape that the Stellia creates is a very intimate one, but it’s not one that I felt was overly confined or cluttered–it might just feel a little underwhelming compared to most open-back headphones, or something like the HD 820.

Dynamics

Dynamics is undoubtedly one of the Stellia’s strongest qualities, and in fact, I don’t think I have personally heard a headphone with this great a sense of punch and slam. In the low notes, the Stellia hits with remarkable authority as it delivers a physical impact that really lets you feel the kick behind bass drums and the bottom, undertone bloom of strung instruments. In the top-end, the Stellia has a fast, weighty snap to it that perfectly recreates the attack of acoustic guitar strings, piano keystrokes, and snare strikes. Altogether, this strong, excursive quality in the Stellia adds an incredible amount of energy that makes tracks feel more life-like and makes for an astonishingly engaging listening experience.

Sound Isolation

Despite having some ports in the rear of its cups, the Stellia does a pretty fair job at keeping sound from leaking; for the most part, I did not get any complaints from people I chatted with on Discord or Zoom about my music becoming audible through my microphone. Additionally, when listening to music, I could not hear the sound of my typing when working. I think that this makes the Stellia a very convenient headphone for when keeping one’s music from becoming intrusive for others is a priority, or for office usage.

EQ

As I mentioned earlier, despite what the measurements might suggest, I think that out-of-the-box, the Stellia is one of the best headphones I’ve had the opportunity to listen to for frequency response and tonality. However, like all other headphones, it’s not perfect and I do like adding some subtle tuning via EQ. I adjust the upper midrange a bit to give vocals a bit more presence by slightly boosting 4K, and I reduce 1K and 2K to reduce the chance of instruments coming through as a little boxy. Then in the treble I reduce 6K and 8K whilst also adding a shelf above 11K to add a little more air; a small change which adds a nice glisten up-top and one I think helps the Stellia open-up a bit more. If you’d like to try my EQ settings for the Stellia, these are the filters I used:

Peak at 1000hz, -2dB Q of 2

Peak at 2000hz, -2dB Q of 3

Peak at 4500hz, 2dB Q of 3

Peak at 6500hz, -2.5dB Q of 3

Peak at 8000hz, -1.5dB Q of 4

High Shelf at 11000hz, +3dB Q of 3

Conclusion

The Stellia is a truly marvelous headphone that, aside from having an intimate soundstage, is able to overcome all the challenges that drivers face when being closed-off and it delivers performance that I personally think lives up to its flagship label. The Stellia provides a superb musical experience that packs an infectious, energetic sound within an ergonomic, supremely beautiful headphone that I believe can serve as a true “endgame” for many listeners.

Regardless of whether it’s open or closed, if you are looking for a top-of-the line headphone that delivers a rich, musical, and exciting sound whilst surfacing all the nuances in your favorite recordings, I think that the Focal Stellia is a delightful headphone that you might be able to call the one.

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