A close perspective of a small backyard fire, crickets in the background. Recorded in september 2013, on a zoom h4n's internal mics, in 48khz, 24bit, in port st lucie, fl, usa.
Some foley of a small bonfire that i lit on the beach. Would be good for a campfire or other general burning scene. Recorded using a rode videomic go into a zoom h1 recorder. Free to use for any projects, no credit required.
A campfire recorded with two stereo omni's spaced a foot apart in beautiful vermont. Recordings are uncompressed 24bit, 48khz, straight out of the deck ready for you to process.
A simple little acoustic guitar lick i came up with. The mood kind of makes me think of a bunch of survivors gathered around a campfire, quietly reflecting on their journey and the hardships they have encountered along the way.
A close-up mic recording of a campfire with plenty of crackling sticks. You can almost feel the heat. :-) taken with a black sony ic voice recorder. Use however you'd like. God bless!.
Some generative campfire sfx made with sunvox. The crackling sounds were made by taking some highpassed white noise, ring modulating it with some more white noise, and then using a noise gate to usilate the loudest 'crackles'. The rumbling was created using lowpassed white noise. Everything was sent into a reverb and a stereo expander.
Fire ambience sound, with some small crackles and pops throughout. Good for campfire or indoor fire sfx/ambience/tone. Recorded with a sennheiser mkh-50 into a zoom f4 recorder.
Woodstove, a few blocks of wood are burning in an antique iron woodstove. As always; let me know what you think of it. Always open for feedback. Tascam dr40.
Here's a recording of a small campfire in the forest at night made in saint-urbain (charlevoix) pq, canada in a night of august 2014. You can hear wind in the leaves and crickets in the background. It was made with a sound devices usbpre2 into a tascam dr-680 (spdif) and 2 microphones studio project c1 in ortf stereo pattern. A little correction was made in equalization of the sample and the volume was augmented w limiter. It's in 24 bits 96khz , 40hz low cut.
This is a recording of an office paper shredder starting up. This model of paper shredder has a button that you can press to run it briefly in reverse, in order to clear paper jams and clean the blades. If the shredder hasn't been used in a while, it takes several seconds to start, and makes a cool noise while doing so. The click at the start of the recording is the switch being pressed. You then hear the motor struggling to start up for about five seconds, and finally it comes up to speed. The high-frequency crackling you hear, particularly once the motor is running smoothly, comes from bits of paper still rolling around in the blades (easy to convert into a campfire or rain). There's another click at the end when the reverse button is released. I uploaded this because several parts of the recording sounded like they'd lend themselves to morphing in various ways to create other interesting noises. Recorded with a hand-held zoom h4n, stereo 96 khz / 24 bits, with the built-in mics, positioned about six inches above the rotating blades of the shredder.