
Muddy T-Bone
New member
Empty the closet....then hang the blankets in there.![]()
The moving blankets bend my clothes hangers.
Empty the closet....then hang the blankets in there.![]()
Hammer and nails...
Do you just record vocals in that room....?
If you prefer the "gobo" approach, rather than say....covering your entire room with treatment...
...since you are a DIY kind of guy, why not build some more serious gobos, with some wheels, using fiberglass or rock-wool, and multi-layer material, with a hard outer side...then you'll be able to utilize them for more than just taking the room slap-echo off of vocals.
You could create a small cubicle with the gobos and stick a guitar amp in there...or if you were to track some real drums, the broadband gobos would provide trapping even for low frequencies, and also some amount of sound control etc.
I mean...you would get much more serious mileage out of proper gobos than you're getting out of the blanklets...and you don't have screw with the rest of the room....but like others have said, the more you treat the room, the more you can use the whole room with good results.
ten characters
At this point, before I make any other purchases, I am going to take this sage advice and work on the sound treatment of the room. Not crazy, but a few bass traps, and a good area for vocals. And as stated, then do some comparisons.
Thanks all for the info, I will return in a few days with a follow up.
I heard you c7. I was hoping that the OP's original post, would open up discussion towards the real way to treat a room. The fact that he heard a great improvement, started the conversation, of how to do it better. The 'reflection filter' comment, pretty much threw it into a sad place, as that is not what I had hoped this thread to move to. I tried..
There is no argument, over what is better. The thread was moving to a way to actually treat a room right.
No stick for this one. now.
Business as usual after post #18. Sigh... ruined...
The 'reflection filter' comment, pretty much threw it into a sad place, as that is not what I had hoped this thread to move to.
I wound up doing months of research and building 14-lineal-feet of gobos 7'6" tall based on John Sayer's designs.
Now those are some serious gobos in your picture!![]()
Spent about 4 months building those in the living room. The original idea was to use them kinda like a vocal booth. The backs are 1/4" oak-faced ply ripped down the middle with a router at a 6-1/2-degree angle. Not a single nail in the entire setup. The backs are glued onto angled pinewood frames wrapped with 3/4" oak ply. Stuffed with 3-1/2 inches of Knauf Soundboard. About $350 worth IIRC! The one with the slot resonator is 5 inches deep. The resonator is tuned to 250Hz as the center band, and an octave each side of that. Everything covered with hemp cloth, of course!
I built the rack on the LHS of the pic too. It's 24" deep and 48" high. 14-space rails over a 12" deep drawer. Built with Kreg joinery techniques. Wish I had built two. The rack was quick, only took a week to put together in the living room. Damn I miss having a garage!
The desk started out as a corner unit. I built a top for it out of about 3/4 of a sheet of birch ply. It's 6'6" wide and 42" deep.
Here's a tip: NEVER run a router in the house!
So, I will be doing more research, but I must admit to all of the those additional comments. I was thinking about looking into "blanket technology" as maybe a solution. Can't say I would have ended up there, but I did go and look up the price of blankets (just sayin'). Now that I have come to a faster understanding (I hope I would have researched it and not made the mistake, but can't say with 100% I would not have), I will take a more serious approach. But, the thread title did at least get me thinking about it more than I have over the last couple of years. So, that is a good thing.
Thanks to all who monitor this forum site and keep some of us from making silly mistakes.
I also own a 1/3 octave real time analyser to measure whats going on.
At the end of the day, once you hear the before and after vocals, you likely will conclude that this could be the best under $100 improvement to your studio. If you put this in another perspective, say you were looking at getting a better microphone, and your budget was $500. Then decided to up the mic budget to $600. That 100 bucks more on a mic is doubtful to give you the same improvement as this fugazi gobo.
Don't knock it. It has it's moments.if I do it properly, I won't have to drag everything around the house to track in various rooms.
Have you tried any of the acoustic measurement software that's out there?