Realised to my dismay that this sound was not available. A card tapping and scraping on a ceramic plate. Designed to imitate the noise of cocaine being cut up. Recorded on a tascam dr-40 in a 4m square kitchen. Tea towel was placed under the plate to cut out an excessive noise from the plate itself. Recorded with a low frequency cut off at 80hz.
A compliation of mono recordings of a pipette of water being squirted onto a hot frying pan. Various intensities. Recorded for use as flesh-burning sound in short film. Rode ntg2 > fel 3. 5 - dx stereo preamp > edirol r-09.
It's a recording of water boiling in a kettle. You can hear the electric gas ignitor, the ignition and then warming up. The water was already very hot so this wouldn't take forever to boil. Then the whistley does it's job. Rising, steady, then the gas was taken out and the whistle slowly fades away. Very long natural fade-out. Recorded with zoom h2. Edited and normalized with audacity.
A recording using the isolating xy capsule microphone on my throat whilst drinking a hot liquid (which causes the throat muscles to expand) giving this characteristic swallow/gulp noise.
Instant mocha (double choc mocha, to be precise) being stirred using a stainless steel teaspoon in a ceramic mug. Recorded using a neumann tlm102 through a focusrite scarlett 8i6. Some noise reduction applied in adobe audition.
Water comes to a boil in a kettle, is poured into a mug, is stirred with a metal spoon, then is dumped in the sink. The neighbors were hammering something, so once or twice i re-started an action. . . .
A recording of a match being struck, bursting into flame. Edited and converted to stereo in audacity. Recorded with a samsung j2-pro phone (getting a better recorder soon).
The sound of many bubbles, either from within a container, or from a heavy liquid. Good for bubbling sounds from within, let's say, a closed pan, or from something like lava!.
Stirring a cup of boiling water. Recorded with zoom h6 recorder and rode ntg-2 shotgun microphone. Cleaned with reaper. Feel free to leave a link to the project that you used this sound in. Would love to see and hear how you used the sound. :).