Fantastic! I’ve never been able to understand / come to grips with the cabling process for modular systems but I can still appreciate your expertise in putting this patch together 👍
There is, since the start of this patch was the smaller patch I did for the Playing with Arpeggiated Chords tutorial (ua-cam.com/video/QXBRu2qmVMY/v-deo.html) 😊
How long did you get into vcv till you were able to understand what you are doing? I watched the tutorial to this patch. And it seems you exactly know what module to choose for what purpose. As if you already have sort of a plan of what a patch should consist of. I kind of want to understand how much time I need to invest to get a good base. I follow a lot of tutorials by rebuilding the shown patches but it’s always just understanding small parts maybe. Right now this feels like math lessons in school (I sucked but survived it somehow 😅).
I also did spend a couple of months only following along with tutorials before I started experimenting on my own. And even after that, it took longer before getting more comfortable with it (which comes down to having more experience, having tried out more combinations and knowing more modules because you used them before). It probably helps that I have a background is software development, so understanding the smaller parts and figuring out how to build a bigger whole out of them kinda comes with the territory 😉. At the time of this Ranar patch, I was almost a year into my VCV journey. Also take into account that in my tutorials, I'm not inventing those patches on the spot. I first try to create a patch around an idea I have for a tutorial. And only when I get something that I like (usually after some time experimenting), I record the tutorial recreating that patch, together with an explanation of what I'm doing.
@@not-things Thank you for taking the time to answer in such detail 🫶🏻 and mentioning the time it took you to get where you were at this stage. It really helps to get a feeling for how much patience i might need🤓. But it’s so much fun and listening to your patch made me kind of shout out loud THIS IS WHAT I WANT🤩 so thank you for sharing! It’s such a motivation for me🙌🏻
Amazing! God bless you!
Thank you!
Fantastic! I’ve never been able to understand / come to grips with the cabling process for modular systems but I can still appreciate your expertise in putting this patch together 👍
Thanks. There was a lot of experimentation with different cable connections and changing knobs values involved 😉
Very nice...
I liked so much!
Thanks a lot!
magic
volt-driven magic 😉
Great Ambient patch!!Love it🧡New Sub👍
Thank you! Glad you like it 👍
Beautiful ❤
Thanks! 😊
Blissful.
Thank you!
Wow! Nice work. I'll have to see if there's a tutorial for this too.
There is, since the start of this patch was the smaller patch I did for the Playing with Arpeggiated Chords tutorial (ua-cam.com/video/QXBRu2qmVMY/v-deo.html) 😊
@@not-things awesome. Thanks!
How long did you get into vcv till you were able to understand what you are doing? I watched the tutorial to this patch. And it seems you exactly know what module to choose for what purpose. As if you already have sort of a plan of what a patch should consist of. I kind of want to understand how much time I need to invest to get a good base. I follow a lot of tutorials by rebuilding the shown patches but it’s always just understanding small parts maybe. Right now this feels like math lessons in school (I sucked but survived it somehow 😅).
I also did spend a couple of months only following along with tutorials before I started experimenting on my own. And even after that, it took longer before getting more comfortable with it (which comes down to having more experience, having tried out more combinations and knowing more modules because you used them before). It probably helps that I have a background is software development, so understanding the smaller parts and figuring out how to build a bigger whole out of them kinda comes with the territory 😉.
At the time of this Ranar patch, I was almost a year into my VCV journey.
Also take into account that in my tutorials, I'm not inventing those patches on the spot. I first try to create a patch around an idea I have for a tutorial. And only when I get something that I like (usually after some time experimenting), I record the tutorial recreating that patch, together with an explanation of what I'm doing.
@@not-things Thank you for taking the time to answer in such detail 🫶🏻 and mentioning the time it took you to get where you were at this stage. It really helps to get a feeling for how much patience i might need🤓. But it’s so much fun and listening to your patch made me kind of shout out loud THIS IS WHAT I WANT🤩 so thank you for sharing! It’s such a motivation for me🙌🏻