
gecko zzed
Grumpy Mod
FadingMusic,
If you look at high-end studios, you will note the amount of engineering that has gone into making the recording environment stable, soundproof and acoustically neutral (for example, suspended acoustic clouds, floors suspended on rubber . . . and so on). Getting this sort of environment is neither easy nor cheap. There are very few home recordists that have the money, time or engineering skills to go to those lengths.
But there are quite a few who attempt to emulate them.
Doing this without the necessary science is like putting a turbo in a Skoda and wondering why it still doesn't go fast.
Vocal booths have their place . . . if they are designed and constructed with a great deal of attention to detail. Something that looks like a vocal booth isn't one,and isn't going to work . . . as you have discovered.
So don't sweat on trying to make things that look like something the big-timers might be use. Work with what you've got. A plain old lounge room is way better than a cardboard box.
I have not done any acoustic treatment at all in my recording space (i.e. lounge room). The recordings I get from it are fine. I am fortunate in that the room is an acoustically friendly space to begin with due to some pre-existing features.
Start simply. Your ears will tell you (as they have already done with your booth), as you get more experience, when things are needing to be fixed.
If you look at high-end studios, you will note the amount of engineering that has gone into making the recording environment stable, soundproof and acoustically neutral (for example, suspended acoustic clouds, floors suspended on rubber . . . and so on). Getting this sort of environment is neither easy nor cheap. There are very few home recordists that have the money, time or engineering skills to go to those lengths.
But there are quite a few who attempt to emulate them.
Doing this without the necessary science is like putting a turbo in a Skoda and wondering why it still doesn't go fast.
Vocal booths have their place . . . if they are designed and constructed with a great deal of attention to detail. Something that looks like a vocal booth isn't one,and isn't going to work . . . as you have discovered.
So don't sweat on trying to make things that look like something the big-timers might be use. Work with what you've got. A plain old lounge room is way better than a cardboard box.
I have not done any acoustic treatment at all in my recording space (i.e. lounge room). The recordings I get from it are fine. I am fortunate in that the room is an acoustically friendly space to begin with due to some pre-existing features.
Start simply. Your ears will tell you (as they have already done with your booth), as you get more experience, when things are needing to be fixed.