Just a couple thoughts in checking out your tutorial. If you have a 2nd camera to record yourself while you're explaining what's going on, use it and put it up in a corner pop-up on the screen. It helps keep the viewer's interest giving them more to look at while there might not be much going on in the main shot. Also adding some text bullet points are helpful to the viewers as well. Especially if you're going between different modes that might not look different visually, but are clearly different soundwise. It can be a hassle to track your shots in the process, but come up huge in editing and putting out a better video. Two good examples I reference a lot are th-cam.com/users/SpectreSoundStudios and th-cam.com/users/fluff191. They do a lot of gear demos from raw audio to full blown mixes with everything detailed.
@@KeenanCrow Actually no, the point of putting the FX after the Looper is to not have to deal with the START/STOP part of the Loop. There’s nothing stopping anyone from recording the FX to a Loop.
@@Folkstone57 if your looper is before your effects, you aren’t including the effects in the loop. As soon as the effects change, the entire tonality of the loop changes as well. You’re recording the raw guitar and looping into the chain. That means no printing effects into the loop.
@@KeenanCrow You can put your FX wherever you want your FX to be, that is the point. I have FX coming from my guitar chain & I have FX after my Looper. This isn’t rocket science. My sound tech has FX at the mixer.
@@Folkstone57 the point is that if the recording device (in this case the looper) is *before* the effects chain, then the effects aren’t being recorded
Great video! Thanks for being helpful on FB too!
Rad! yer a wizard Keenan!
Very helpful! I feel like I'm re-exploring my Ditto x4 every other day! Great tips
Awesome! It’s super easy on the Ditto too. To go into seamless mode, just flick the first dip switch on the back up and you’re done.
Just a couple thoughts in checking out your tutorial. If you have a 2nd camera to record yourself while you're explaining what's going on, use it and put it up in a corner pop-up on the screen. It helps keep the viewer's interest giving them more to look at while there might not be much going on in the main shot. Also adding some text bullet points are helpful to the viewers as well. Especially if you're going between different modes that might not look different visually, but are clearly different soundwise. It can be a hassle to track your shots in the process, but come up huge in editing and putting out a better video. Two good examples I reference a lot are th-cam.com/users/SpectreSoundStudios and th-cam.com/users/fluff191. They do a lot of gear demos from raw audio to full blown mixes with everything detailed.
There’s yet another way to solve the problem, which is have the FX after the Looper.
Yes, but then you lose the ability to print effects into the loop.
@@KeenanCrow
Actually no, the point of putting the FX after the
Looper is to not have to deal with the START/STOP part of the
Loop. There’s nothing stopping anyone from recording the FX to a Loop.
@@Folkstone57 if your looper is before your effects, you aren’t including the effects in the loop. As soon as the effects change, the entire tonality of the loop changes as well. You’re recording the raw guitar and looping into the chain. That means no printing effects into the loop.
@@KeenanCrow
You can put your FX wherever you want your FX to be, that is the point. I have FX coming from my guitar chain & I have FX after my
Looper. This isn’t rocket science. My sound tech has FX at the mixer.
@@Folkstone57 the point is that if the recording device (in this case the looper) is *before* the effects chain, then the effects aren’t being recorded