Thanks for the Kraken shout out! You are 100% correct about the website. I put all my efforts into the product. There is no reason (that I can think of) for the website to be flashy! I am a heavy exponent of substance-over-style. Hopefully the app speaks for itself. :)
Was just using Kraken 1.4 on a feature and it was great! Had some interesting quirks (haven't done the EDL workflow much), but defnitely helped becasue the Davinci Resolve AAF wasn't working with Pro Tools' Field Recorder Workflow.
If you're doing a lot of dialogue clean up with RX, I suggest you get a simple drawing tablet (I have a Wacom), it makes selection quicker and more precise. And for general use, a trackball or at least an ergonomic mouse. I have a Kensington Slimblade and love it because it has a "drag" function, where you click with one button and it drags the clip (or selection) without having to hold the button. Trust me, it eases the stress in your muscles a lot.
@@ChristopherTesta it's called One, I have the small version (there's also a medium size). The Intuos has a few assignable buttons, but I already have my shortcuts set on the numeric keypad so I didn't need them.
Great list Thomas! I think sometimes we can forget about the “boring” tools too. But in my opinion extremely important. As an example, having good data management. I use a RAID as my working drive, then use Carbon Copy Cloner to back that up to a separate external drive and then use Backblaze to backup to a remote site.
@87forsak @@ThomasBoykin Good shoutout. I have been "lucky" so far, but really consider how to improve my data managment. Right now I have the projects spread out on a handful of external harddisks. I am thinking in the lines of getting a big raid NAS and a big external drive for starters, but would love to hear more about other peoples way to manage the data too
One tool I recently started using for sound design is the ARA2 Melodyne integration with pro tools. It's super handy for doing complex pitch shifting within one sound effect by being able to break up the sound into seperate sections and each of those sections can be moved to whatever pitch you like. Found it much faster and easier than audiosuite, resampling or automation. Also, it's very fast workflow having the interface built within the edit screen.
Thanks for the list Thomas! One plugin that was recommended to me by Rob Byers is POWAIR. Its a loudness leveler, helps with tightening the dynamics of the dialogue. But damn is it wonderful and transparent! I'd definitely give it a try at the end of your DX chain. It's a pretty amazing tool.
Again a wonderful video! What you have done for teaching young (and old!) people about the art of film sound is invaluable. My own tiny addition to your list would be the Sonnox Inflator on lavs, as it can give even the muddiest inside-the-scarf recording some bite in the mix.
Another great video. Definitely going to check out Chameleon. I've added Oxford Transmod to our foley chain. Really helps tame any harsh transients and smooths everything out nicely. Agree with the SA-2, always on the end of the dials chain these days.
Great video and thanks for sharing! Probably could've almost done a top 20 as I'm sure Youlean Loudness Meter was just behind some others mentioned. After a 5.1 mix do you typically do another stereo specific mix or grab a downmix plugin? I've found the Waves DTS Neural plugins to be pretty great for upmixing and downmixing, tho I've heard Nugen Halo and of course anything by Neyrinck to be great. Oddly enough for score stems and even ADR I like adding the Waves NLS sometimes. Emulates an SSL, Neve, and EMI consoles with a saturation knob that can help warm up anything too sterile or perfect. Trackspacer is another interesting plugin. It's functions as a side chain compressor but is made up of 32 dynamic EQ bands instead of typical compressor methods. I've found it a quick help on doc or similar non-fiction media when you want to duck just a little bit in more precise regions than can be done with a multi-band. Futzbox by McDSP is also fun for a variety of futzing.
I've used Soundminer for years, but I love my PC and Soundminer is pretty limited on PC. I started using Soundly a while back after you plugged it and I get way better integration with it than I do Soundminer. I would love to see a video how you organize your local libraries in Soundly and keep a well curated SFX library.
Love your videos and always appreciate your insight!!! I recently got into using Pitch 'N Time on certain things. It's great for matching music cuts to videos cuts or for sound design. Even dialogue!! The most transparent pitch shifter i've ever used. different algorythms based on what your processing helps eliminate artifacting. a little on the pricey side for a pitch shifter, but well worth it, especially for music editing.
@@ThomasBoykin Somehow I knew exactly what you meant. I thought I was tripping when I thought my vocal sounded weird with soothe on it. I kept seeing people swear by it on youtube but forgot that maybe soothe paid them to say these nice things.
Been binging your videos this past week. Thank you so much for the content man. Is there much difference in workflow when working with animation vs film?
You can easily save on half of this list if not more, if you use steinberg Nuendo. I know Pro tools is the standard and everyone should learn it (I myself am pro tools certified user) but when it comes to workflow, and what you can do with a DAW, Nuendo is way ahead of the game. Kraken is so nice.
@@ThomasBoykinyou are 100% right about the one man band, I totally agree with you that is why I had to master pro tools. But for the other part, no, not any DAW can do what Nuendo can do without using expensive 3rd party plugins from vocalign to izotope, to soundly and melodyne etc ... Which you never need using Nuendo.
@@BayanChacraYou're right, not any DAW. Nuendo is the most advanced, fully integrated DAW for post. Sadly, it's far from being the standard. I wish I could work with Nuendo, but it's just impossible when working with large teams or simply because the mixing stage is always done in large mixing facilities in my case.
Very informative as always. I gotta say, as a fresh graduate of audio production, I am getting my first opportunity to work as the Sound Designer on a film that a friend has funded, and I don't have any of these plugins (except Soundly). Nor do I have much money at all, lol. Any advice on what is absolutely necessary for my first film?
@ yeah for sure. I got the 5.1 version but am using the mono option for matching room tone on adr to match production dialogue recorded on a single mic... it’s pretty amazing so far. I assume you’d use the 5.1 option when matching ambience for the surround mix?
Ehy Thomas, for someone that cannot afford a 5.1 speakers set up and acoustic treatment, do you think a pair of headphone such as Sennheiser HD660 can be helpful?
A video showing your workflow using those plugins would be fantastic! Cheers! ☺️
Great content. I couldn't agree more on Soundly, SA2 and the RadioShack spl meter, this one is actually a gem
Thanks for the Kraken shout out! You are 100% correct about the website. I put all my efforts into the product. There is no reason (that I can think of) for the website to be flashy! I am a heavy exponent of substance-over-style. Hopefully the app speaks for itself. :)
I really appreciate that mindset myself. Function over form every day.
Was just using Kraken 1.4 on a feature and it was great! Had some interesting quirks (haven't done the EDL workflow much), but defnitely helped becasue the Davinci Resolve AAF wasn't working with Pro Tools' Field Recorder Workflow.
If you're doing a lot of dialogue clean up with RX, I suggest you get a simple drawing tablet (I have a Wacom), it makes selection quicker and more precise. And for general use, a trackball or at least an ergonomic mouse. I have a Kensington Slimblade and love it because it has a "drag" function, where you click with one button and it drags the clip (or selection) without having to hold the button. Trust me, it eases the stress in your muscles a lot.
Hey Tiago, which Wacom do you have?
@@ChristopherTesta it's called One, I have the small version (there's also a medium size). The Intuos has a few assignable buttons, but I already have my shortcuts set on the numeric keypad so I didn't need them.
@@tiagolorena nice. Thanks
Great list Thomas! I think sometimes we can forget about the “boring” tools too. But in my opinion extremely important. As an example, having good data management. I use a RAID as my working drive, then use Carbon Copy Cloner to back that up to a separate external drive and then use Backblaze to backup to a remote site.
Yes! Data management is very important. I’ve had people coming back years later for projects.
@87forsak @@ThomasBoykin Good shoutout. I have been "lucky" so far, but really consider how to improve my data managment. Right now I have the projects spread out on a handful of external harddisks. I am thinking in the lines of getting a big raid NAS and a big external drive for starters, but would love to hear more about other peoples way to manage the data too
One tool I recently started using for sound design is the ARA2 Melodyne integration with pro tools. It's super handy for doing complex pitch shifting within one sound effect by being able to break up the sound into seperate sections and each of those sections can be moved to whatever pitch you like. Found it much faster and easier than audiosuite, resampling or automation. Also, it's very fast workflow having the interface built within the edit screen.
Thanks for the list Thomas! One plugin that was recommended to me by Rob Byers is POWAIR. Its a loudness leveler, helps with tightening the dynamics of the dialogue. But damn is it wonderful and transparent! I'd definitely give it a try at the end of your DX chain. It's a pretty amazing tool.
I’ll check it out.
Again a wonderful video! What you have done for teaching young (and old!) people about the art of film sound is invaluable. My own tiny addition to your list would be the Sonnox Inflator on lavs, as it can give even the muddiest inside-the-scarf recording some bite in the mix.
A great plugin. I use Saturn for this right now.
Another great video. Definitely going to check out Chameleon. I've added Oxford Transmod to our foley chain. Really helps tame any harsh transients and smooths everything out nicely. Agree with the SA-2, always on the end of the dials chain these days.
Thanks for this video, helps a lot! Can you talk about your 5.1 setup and some mix tips if you have some? Cheers from Argentina!
Do you mean physical speakers or session?
holy crap you and alex uploaded on the same day !
alex who?
Great video and thanks for sharing! Probably could've almost done a top 20 as I'm sure Youlean Loudness Meter was just behind some others mentioned. After a 5.1 mix do you typically do another stereo specific mix or grab a downmix plugin? I've found the Waves DTS Neural plugins to be pretty great for upmixing and downmixing, tho I've heard Nugen Halo and of course anything by Neyrinck to be great. Oddly enough for score stems and even ADR I like adding the Waves NLS sometimes. Emulates an SSL, Neve, and EMI consoles with a saturation knob that can help warm up anything too sterile or perfect. Trackspacer is another interesting plugin. It's functions as a side chain compressor but is made up of 32 dynamic EQ bands instead of typical compressor methods. I've found it a quick help on doc or similar non-fiction media when you want to duck just a little bit in more precise regions than can be done with a multi-band. Futzbox by McDSP is also fun for a variety of futzing.
I've used Soundminer for years, but I love my PC and Soundminer is pretty limited on PC. I started using Soundly a while back after you plugged it and I get way better integration with it than I do Soundminer. I would love to see a video how you organize your local libraries in Soundly and keep a well curated SFX library.
Organizing is something I’m not great at. I’m more of a bull in a China shop.
Love your videos and always appreciate your insight!!!
I recently got into using Pitch 'N Time on certain things. It's great for matching music cuts to videos cuts or for sound design. Even dialogue!! The most transparent pitch shifter i've ever used. different algorythms based on what your processing helps eliminate artifacting. a little on the pricey side for a pitch shifter, but well worth it, especially for music editing.
I forgot about that one. Yes, best pitch shifter out. Has been for like ten years!
What about dx revive pro and goyo ( supertone voice cleaner)?
Ehy Thomas hope you're doing well. Which reverb plugin would you suggest for audio post? Thanks!
Any one will work, use what you have before spending money on something new
Definitely will check out mcdsp. I don’t like how soothe sounds on my vocal.
Soothe sounds like Taco Bell tastes.
@@ThomasBoykin Somehow I knew exactly what you meant. I thought I was tripping when I thought my vocal sounded weird with soothe on it. I kept seeing people swear by it on youtube but forgot that maybe soothe paid them to say these nice things.
Thanks again for all the vids. You help a ton of people!!❤
Been binging your videos this past week. Thank you so much for the content man. Is there much difference in workflow when working with animation vs film?
Yes. Mostly that the VO is very clean, so you don't have to worry about noise so much. That and using more Foley since there is no production sound.
Thanks brother 🙏 Happy new year 🎉
Great video. Do more of that about sound mixing. it's great
Bro thanks for this kind of content keep inspiring 🙏🏼
You can easily save on half of this list if not more, if you use steinberg Nuendo. I know Pro tools is the standard and everyone should learn it (I myself am pro tools certified user) but when it comes to workflow, and what you can do with a DAW, Nuendo is way ahead of the game.
Kraken is so nice.
Yes if you are a one man band or don’t need to work with other professionals on union productions, any daw will do. Even garage band.
@@ThomasBoykinyou are 100% right about the one man band, I totally agree with you that is why I had to master pro tools. But for the other part, no, not any DAW can do what Nuendo can do without using expensive 3rd party plugins from vocalign to izotope, to soundly and melodyne etc ... Which you never need using Nuendo.
@@BayanChacraYou're right, not any DAW. Nuendo is the most advanced, fully integrated DAW for post. Sadly, it's far from being the standard. I wish I could work with Nuendo, but it's just impossible when working with large teams or simply because the mixing stage is always done in large mixing facilities in my case.
@@mctapia12I can't agree more. Exactly my case.
Very informative as always. I gotta say, as a fresh graduate of audio production, I am getting my first opportunity to work as the Sound Designer on a film that a friend has funded, and I don't have any of these plugins (except Soundly). Nor do I have much money at all, lol. Any advice on what is absolutely necessary for my first film?
Field recorder
Do you recommend getting the Chamelon stereo or 5.1 version?
Depends on how you will use it.
@ yeah for sure. I got the 5.1 version but am using the mono option for matching room tone on adr to match production dialogue recorded on a single mic... it’s pretty amazing so far. I assume you’d use the 5.1 option when matching ambience for the surround mix?
Hi! Can you make a video about a cheaper or free alternative plugin for beginner as well? thank you !
Good idea!
Good Job Thomas
Gracias
Ehy Thomas, for someone that cannot afford a 5.1 speakers set up and acoustic treatment, do you think a pair of headphone such as Sennheiser HD660 can be helpful?
Yes
Hey! How do you find the faderport with Pro Tools? I’m looking for a decent controller that doesn’t break the bank. Thanks!
It’s ok. I’d recommend an S3 if you have the coin.
@@ThomasBoykin why not an s1?
Helpful video! Thanks
Great video man.
What do you recommend to study 5.1 mixing?
I have some videos on 5.1 mixing
@@ThomasBoykin seems i can't find them except for the one where you starr mixing in the movie audio post production series
What preset do you like to use for SA dialogue?
I don’t use presets, I set it for each film
Cosmos from WAVES is free and I've been using it since it came out. It's pretty useful. The AI indexer will go through and tag things.
Tell us a little bit about yourself. Do you assist in your career?
A good idea for a video!
Thanks!
Your site is nor working.