I've only had one take of breaking glass mirror shot for feature film - so i used 3 different microphones at different input levels & position to avoid clipping. This one is from oktava mk-012 short condenser microphone with omni capsule to sound devices 788t. .
Large cardboard box full of broken glass shards being repeatedly picked up and dropped, shaken, and then the glass smashed up into smaller pieces inside the box.
A breaking glass sound. Originally created as a sfx sample for a song. A combination of snippets from two separate public domain breaking glass recordings, plus envelope shape manipulation in audacity.
I needed a nice breaking glass sound but none were quite punchy enough so i grabbed a few from here, comped them, eq'd them and panned them nicely. Here is the result. Hope somebody else finds it useful.
I used one of those blank plastic cds that you sometimes get when you buy cd holders. I broke it up into many pieces and dropped them multiple times adding on the ending to make it sound like the leftover pieces bounce. Sorry about the backround noises, recorded on a laptop with the fan running and a tv in the backround. Came out pretty good though. I was satisfied in the end though.
Short, heavy sound of a glass object being shattered. Created by mixing and editing, in audacity, some recordings of a glass object being thrown on the ground.
The sound of a tall glass tumbler smashing against laminated flooring. Recorded in mono with a zoom r16 using an audio technica at2020 microphone about 2 feet away.