
gullfo
New member
*Putting large panels of dense foam (or carpet) on the walls and possibly the ceiling
*Suspending wires between ceiling and floor about 3 inches from the wall and packing the space with pillows/doonas
*Standing wire-sprung mattresses up to create a 'dead' space for putting the mic in when recording
why do all that work? just stack rolls of r11 or r13 insulation ($100) into the corners to act as bass traps and polycylindrical diffusers. you can cover with cloth if you like) then buy some rigid insulation panels (say 6 @ $50) and some cloth (another $50 + $10 for fire retardent) and build some absorbers. hang them 1 in front, 1 on each side, 1 overhead, and 2 behind.
its safer than hanging foam and carpet (a fire hazard) and way more effective than mattresses. use picture wire to hang the absorbers.
if you need mobility, put the absorbers on mic stands ($20 ea) so you can form a corner with them to create an adhoc booth.
so for less than about $250 and some work, you can create a very effective (and mostly pro looking) environment without much risk. if you want it deader, the carpet and drapes will help in the high end but most rooms sound crappy due to low end problems and reflection point interference with mics and mixing.
use bookshelves as diffusers by stacking the books to create random depths on the shelves (sorry if you're neat...)
read everything you can on acoustic treatments at Ethan Winer's site and in the many fine books out there
