What a beautiful place to work. Really like the look and concept of this studios. As far as i can see, there is a really good balance between absorbtion and diffusion. the work flow must be exeptional😊
There's something wrong with this concept. Ask yourself, how much did you pay, every year, to use the wav or mp3 format and the encoders? This is a tax, paid to a corporation, to *exist* as a sound engineer. It's a product you *have* to use, no other company can make its own version, there's no free market in this, it's a monopoly. It's immoral.
They are far back there! The placement of the subs was designed to control room modes. Those locations help to minimize peaks/dips in the frequency response. All delays were tuned by Focal and Dolby. Thanks for watching!
Impressive studio, thanks for sharing this experience with us. Would like to visit StudioDMI one day 🎼🎵🎶🎸. Great job by Haverstick Designs. Post more of these kind of video's.
Question: I have a W= 20ft X L=19ft X H=8.35ft room size. My problem is, that I have a center bulk head running down the center, length wise. (Vents for upstairs) It hangs down 14' from the ceiling and 4 ft wide. It's Popcorn texture ceiling finished. I also have a all brick fire place with mantel running a natural gas Fireplace to my left. Right now, the bulk head runs from front to back of me. Thats the 19ft measurement. Even though I have that bulk head, should I rotate my mix position to make that bulk head run from left to right over top of me so that I can have the length be the longer side of the room for my mix position and me face the 19ft wall?
With the length and width only being 1 foot different from each other, I would probably set things up so that you don't have the bulkhead directly above you so that you maximize ceiling height about your speakers and mix position.
I'm tired of hearing the 38% rule falsely repeated around the Web. The ideal listening position (for a longer room) is at 39.6%, not 38%. The 4th harmonic null sits right at 37.5%, which is too close to 38%. You should be placing your listening position between the 4th (37.5) and 6th (41.7) harmonic null. No, you don't want to ever put your listening position at 38%. Also, a set percentage does not work for every room length because of the fixed position of the chair and desk, and the minimum required listening distance of the speaker.
Agreed. It should be widely labeled as more of a starting point than an actual “rule”. I see it all too often how it leads many to make bad choices regarding their listening positions, and building their whole room a “38%” listening position, only to have either non-existent low end or too much low end at their listening position because they heard professionals online say “it should be”. That “rule” does not work for every room. I recently experienced a recording studio with a PMC atmos set-up and the studio designer setup their listening position at “38%”, and there was little to no low end. It was an extremely sad listening experience.
@@josepuente8852 The issue with Listening Positions is that people aren't seeing or understanding what 33% or 38% really looks like without using a CAD program. If your room is only 10 feet long, then there's no way 33 or 38 percent will work, because your desk and studio monitors will be crashing into and beyond the front wall. In most smaller rooms only 45.8% will work. And you need a fairly long room for 32.8% to work.
True,moving goal post for small bedroom studios. Small indipendant studios have been putting pressure on big studios with their fency equipment that has been mostly replaceable with plugins, knowledge gate keeping abolished by internet mainly platforms like youtube so i see atmos as their return to their glory days of having endless work due to small studios not having the expensive new equipment needed to mix atmos😭but who listens to music in a treated room with 50k sound system sitted in special position🙄
Typically incredible design from the Haverstick clan! These videos are so inspirational ❤
Fancy seeing you here! You gents do have an eye for fantastic studios and an ear for acoustics ;)
Appreciate you guys! ❤
What a beautiful place to work. Really like the look and concept of this studios. As far as i can see, there is a really good balance between absorbtion and diffusion. the work flow must be exeptional😊
It is a really special place. Beautiful studios, but even better people running them! Thanks for watching!
There's something wrong with this concept.
Ask yourself, how much did you pay, every year, to use the wav or mp3 format and the encoders?
This is a tax, paid to a corporation, to *exist* as a sound engineer.
It's a product you *have* to use, no other company can make its own version, there's no free market in this, it's a monopoly.
It's immoral.
Smells like monopoly 🥴
That space looks very modern and cozy and professional. I wish you more and more and more work. No vacation! I😁
Appreciate the kind words. . .but can we still take vacations? 😉
Why is the sub so far back, did they delay the other speakers about 5ms to compensate?
They are far back there! The placement of the subs was designed to control room modes. Those locations help to minimize peaks/dips in the frequency response. All delays were tuned by Focal and Dolby. Thanks for watching!
Do those speaker stands have automatic motorized height adjustment? I've been looking for stands that can do like I described.
I don't think these are motorized, but in the past, we have used the MOTOA stands from Sound Anchors.
www.soundanchors.com/products/p/motorized-stand
Impressive studio, thanks for sharing this experience with us. Would like to visit StudioDMI one day 🎼🎵🎶🎸. Great job by Haverstick Designs. Post more of these kind of video's.
Thanks so much for watching these videos! We have filmed six others recently that will be releasing in the coming months!
That was awesome 💯
Thanks for taking the time to watch the video!
Question:
I have a W= 20ft X L=19ft X H=8.35ft room size.
My problem is, that I have a center bulk head running down the center, length wise.
(Vents for upstairs)
It hangs down 14' from the ceiling and 4 ft wide. It's Popcorn texture ceiling finished.
I also have a all brick fire place with mantel running a natural gas Fireplace to my left.
Right now, the bulk head runs from front to back of me.
Thats the 19ft measurement.
Even though I have that bulk head, should I rotate my mix position to make that bulk head run from left to right over top of me so that I can have the length be the longer side of the room for my mix position and me face the 19ft wall?
With the length and width only being 1 foot different from each other, I would probably set things up so that you don't have the bulkhead directly above you so that you maximize ceiling height about your speakers and mix position.
I am modeling my bed room like studio M on a mega budget haha
Not a bad room to emulate! 🙌
Someone will make all this obsolete with a fold up and fold down plugin just to make deliverables in atmos
Haverstick are the Best!
Working on this project was an honor! Thank you!
😍😍🤘🤘🤘
BIG LIKE FROM "ISRAEL" !!
I appreciate you checking out the videos!
I'm tired of hearing the 38% rule falsely repeated around the Web. The ideal listening position (for a longer room) is at 39.6%, not 38%. The 4th harmonic null sits right at 37.5%, which is too close to 38%. You should be placing your listening position between the 4th (37.5) and 6th (41.7) harmonic null. No, you don't want to ever put your listening position at 38%. Also, a set percentage does not work for every room length because of the fixed position of the chair and desk, and the minimum required listening distance of the speaker.
Agreed. It should be widely labeled as more of a starting point than an actual “rule”. I see it all too often how it leads many to make bad choices regarding their listening positions, and building their whole room a “38%” listening position, only to have either non-existent low end or too much low end at their listening position because they heard professionals online say “it should be”. That “rule” does not work for every room.
I recently experienced a recording studio with a PMC atmos set-up and the studio designer setup their listening position at “38%”, and there was little to no low end. It was an extremely sad listening experience.
@@josepuente8852 The issue with Listening Positions is that people aren't seeing or understanding what 33% or 38% really looks like without using a CAD program. If your room is only 10 feet long, then there's no way 33 or 38 percent will work, because your desk and studio monitors will be crashing into and beyond the front wall. In most smaller rooms only 45.8% will work. And you need a fairly long room for 32.8% to work.
A waste of money another industry ploy.
Looks amazing tho
Not your Money I guess.
True,moving goal post for small bedroom studios. Small indipendant studios have been putting pressure on big studios with their fency equipment that has been mostly replaceable with plugins, knowledge gate keeping abolished by internet mainly platforms like youtube so i see atmos as their return to their glory days of having endless work due to small studios not having the expensive new equipment needed to mix atmos😭but who listens to music in a treated room with 50k sound system sitted in special position🙄