5 tips for making the most of Dehumaniser 2
Get 5 tips to help you make the most of Krotos’ Dehumaniser 2:
Get 5 tips to help you make the most of Krotos’ Dehumaniser 2:
TRANSITIONS, DROPS, SCRAPES & HITS, DRONES, WHOOSH PADS, HUMS, PULSES, BEATS, HITS, WOBBLES and more with elements covering METAL, WOOD, ELECTRICITY, and SYNTH are all in this concise set of 300 cinematic sound effects! Each sound has been carefully designed to cover all shapes and sizes you’ll ever need for any media project that needs epic cinematic TRANSITIONS of the highest industry standard quality!
ADDITIONAL FEATURES:
GET THE MOST EPIC TRAILER SOUND EFFECTS NOW!
Make use of the diverse mechanized noises from a standard office printer, scanner, and copier in your audio projects!
Print is a boutique sound effects library of automated clicking, beeping, and whirring sounds all captured from a single Ricoh® laser printer. Every action, setting, and component of the machine was pristinely recorded to give you high-quality printer sound effects including the paper feed, scanner bed, duplexer and more.
These printer recordings are perfect for office backgrounds. And they are equally useful in the sound design of retro-futuristic devices, robotic creatures, electronic gadgets, and steampunk industrial machines. The Print library also includes several pre-designed steampunk sound effects ready for immediate use.
Print is also included in Pro Sound Effects’ CORE: Standard.
Colin Hart: Recordist, Editor
Joseph DiMarco: Editor, Librarian
Sci-Fi Voices transports you to the future with 6 iconically performed and crafted character voices delivering over 800 phrases, grunts and screams. They were inspired by popular Sci-Fi Film, TV and Video Game series, and are provided without reverb to give you full flexibility. Recorded in 24Bit 96kHz, allowing for further sonic manipulation.
We worked closely with our voice talent to ensure that the most interesting performances were captured for many different scenarios. Whether you are making an alien invasion game or need voice effects for user interface systems, this library covers it all. All lines were meticulously edited and processed (without reverb) by our Audio Craftsmen.
If you think your project is in need of some fresh voice content than this library is for you!
Here are the included characters in the order that they appear in the demo track –
Male Exosuit: A voice with some serious weight. It gives the impression of size and a metallic body with moving parts.
Female Computer: Your ship’s mainframe computer has a voice, it is soothing in even the most precarious situations.
Male Alien Cyborg: Half machine, half man. This character is determined to destroy all humans.
Male Helper Robot: A slightly annoying, overly helpful robot who will follow you and narrate your surroundings.
Female Alien Queen: The Queen of a disgusting alien race, she takes pleasure when infecting humans.
Male Robot Police: There is a future in which police officers are robots; and badass.
Please note: The demo track contains third party sound effects and music, but all of the voice sound effects are included in this library.
Get your ears around a genuine piece of film history! Introducing the Moviola UD 20 CS Film Editing machine. Countless films have been made on these iconic upright film editors including work by Kubrick and Spielberg.
We found this beast lurking in a hallway at Pinewood Studios and were shocked when she fired up. So we did the honourable thing…..miked her up and clicked, flicked and revved our way to making this library.
We ran the Moviola both with and without film performing starts, stops, wind ups, wind downs and even some pedal revs.
With a Neumann M/S setup under the belly, a Sanken CO-100K overhead and an MKH60 tight in on the mechanisms we have this covered from all angles. We also provide a beautiful mix track for when you just want to lay great stuff quickly.
Shot at 24Bit/192kHz the Sanken allows for extreme pitching and twisting, making this library the perfect set of ingredients for designing cool new mech. So if you’re tinkering with a clumsy robot or just want to lay a projector this library will get you there.
https://youtu.be/LLwEG8Ll7ng
This bundle gives you a large collection of high quality sounds from clunky mechanical antique cash registers from the early 1900s as well as an electric metal cash register from the 1970. Powerful source material for designing all sorts of mechanical machinery, user interface, creatures – or simply cash registers.
Bonus: The bundle comes with two Kontakt instruments (requires full version of Kontakt 6) with several round robins and multiple microphone positions that be used to add mechanical rhythms to your music, or easily sync the sounds to pictures with MIDI notes.
Clunky mechanical sounds from a collection of antique cash registers from the early 1900s
Perfect source material for designing all sorts of odd mechanical machinery, steam punk inventions, UI sounds for points and money, or just actual cash registers in shopping scenes. ~420 sounds in 285 files.
For creating this library we had to track down old cash registers in Denmark. We recorded them all with several high quality microphones from multiple perspectives – even with a lavalier microphone hidden inside the machine for super dry mechanical sounds and contact microphone attached to the back for beefy low end that can be mixed in to make your sounds feel heavier. We even added punchy ready-to-use detailed mixes of all the microphones.
We experimented to explore all the sonic gems hiding in the machines. You’ll find sounds like the classic “money earned sound” from turning the clicking cranks and bell ring as the drawer opens, chunky mechanical sounds from pulling the levers and foley sounds from touching and handling the cash registers.
The library has been tagged with extensive metadata and has been tested in Soundminer, Basehead, Soundly and Pro Sound Effects’ Search to make it easy to find the sounds you are looking for.
The Antique Cash Registers library includes:
– Chunky rolling lever pulls in various durations
– The classic Ka-ching! sound from from turning the crank
– Performed continous mechanical sounds, perfect for machinery or creatures
– Opening and closing the wooden drawers – with and without money
– Foley and impacts from handling the registers
– Clicky mechaincal sounds from turning the cranks and smaller knobs inside the registers
– Several microphones from different perspectives as well as a punchy ready-to-use detailed mixes of all the microphones
– A Kontakt Instruments with several round robins and multiple microphone positions that be used to add mechanical rhythms to your music, or easily sync the sounds to pictures with MIDI notes
We asked Katrine Amsler (Wolfenstein 2, Control) to play around with the library, and she came up with this beautiful haunting piece:
Clicky and rolling metallic sounds from an old metallic Sweda cash register from the 1970s
Great source material for designing all sorts of odd mechanical insects, robot or machine movement, mechanical UI buttons or just actual cash registers in shopping scenes. ~270 sounds in 165 files.
We recorded the cash register with high quality microphones from multiple perspectives – even with a lavalier microphone hidden inside the machine for super dry mechanical sounds and contact microphone attached to the back for beefy low end that can be mixed in to make your sounds feel heavier. We even added punchy ready-to-use detailed mixes of all the microphones. Recorded in a professional noise free recording studio, giving you the complete freedom to shape the sounds as you please
We experimented to explore all the sonic gems hiding in the machine. You’ll find sounds of the electric number indicators rolling when pressing the payment button, creepy click-clacky insect-like movements, thin metallic movements and impacts and foley sounds from touching and handling the cash registers.
The library has been tagged with extensive metadata and has been tested in Soundminer, Basehead, Soundly and Pro Sound Effects’ Search to make it easy to find the sounds you are looking for.
– Mechanical click-clacky insect-like movements
– Beefy rolling sounds from electric number indicators rolling when pressing the payment button
– Several metallic drawer movements
– A huge variety of mechanical buton clicks
– Foley and impacts from handling the register
– Several microphones from different perspectives as well as a punchy ready-to-use detailed mixes of all the microphones
– A Kontakt Instruments with several round robins and multiple microphone positions that be used to add mechanical rhythms to your music, or easily sync the sounds to pictures with MIDI notes
Clicky and rolling metallic sounds from an old metallic Sweda cash register from the 1970s + a bonus Kontakt MIDI instrument.
Great source material for designing all sorts of odd mechanical insects, robot or machine movement, mechanical UI buttons or just actual cash registers in shopping scenes. ~270 sounds in 165 files.
We recorded the cash register with high quality microphones from multiple perspectives – even with a lavalier microphone hidden inside the machine for super dry mechanical sounds and contact microphone attached to the back for beefy low end that can be mixed in to make your sounds feel heavier. We even added punchy ready-to-use detailed mixes of all the microphones. Recorded in a professional noise free recording studio, giving you the complete freedom to shape the sounds as you please
We experimented to explore all the sonic gems hiding in the machine. You’ll find sounds of the electric number indicators rolling when pressing the payment button, creepy click-clacky insect-like movements, thin metallic movements and impacts and foley sounds from touching and handling the cash registers.
The library has been tagged with extensive metadata and has been tested in Soundminer, Basehead, Soundly and Pro Sound Effects’ Search to make it easy to find the sounds you are looking for.
The library comes with a Kontakt instrument (requires full version of Kontakt 6) with several round robins and multiple microphone positions that be used to add mechanical rhythms to your music, or easily sync the sounds to pictures with MIDI notes.
– Mechanical click-clacky insect-like movements
– Beefy rolling sounds from electric number indicators rolling when pressing the payment button
– Several metallic drawer movements
– A huge variety of mechanical buton clicks
– Foley and impacts from handling the register
– Several microphones from different perspectives as well as a punchy ready-to-use detailed mixes of all the microphones
– A Kontakt Instruments with several round robins and multiple microphone positions that be used to add mechanical rhythms to your music, or easily sync the sounds to pictures with MIDI notes