These are field-recordings of glass bottles breaking when thrown in a container. The sounds were recorded with a zoom field recorder and a cardoid microphone.
I used a tiny silver medal and a glass container to replicate the sound of a wedding ring being set on a glass bedside table. Different combinations, hollow, compact, with and without rattling. Rode ntg2 + zoom h4nno processing.
Water is being poured in and out of assorted ceramic and glass bowls, jugs or bottles. I left a bit of the container's own noise in, such as cork bottles plopping or the filled container being slid over a wooden table, for all your bartenders needs :p a lovely chuckling bottle is somewhere by the end.
A sound of a glass container sliding across a table. I recorded it for blenderguru's blender doughnut animation tutorial that i completed. Feel free to use it on any project. No need for attribution. :).
Small street, quiet (few vehicles, pedestrians, people talking). Someone throws glass in a recycling container at 0'23. Birds singing throughout. Recorded at 10 am from inside a car (stopped, windows open).
The sound of ethanol being burned out of a glass jug. This sound was made by putting a small amount of ethanol into a glass jug and allowing the vapors to fill the container. Then a flame was held to the mouth of the jug creating a jet of fire. Link to video with sound: https://imgur. Com/s2xdbs5. The sound was recorded on a zoom h4n recorder. Jan/32/19.
Putting a 1 liter half-full plastic bottle on a glass table. Recorded with zoom h2. Edited with audacity. This sound is cc0 but i highly recommend that you include a link to this page when using it, to avoid misunderstandings. Http://farm9. Staticflickr. Com/8070/8213683889_517a10ef52_o. Pngon flac and ogg vorbis audio file formats. Contact me if you have interest in specific sounds for open source or commercial purpose.
Clean recording of water being poured into a metal pot, meant to emulate the sound of water being poured into a kettle/teapot. Would work for pouring any liquid into almost any metal container (metal containers give off a subtle "twang" that isn't generally produced when pouring into other material containers such as glass, ceramic, plastic, wood, etc). Recorded with an akg p170 into a zoom f8n at 48khz, 24-bit. No processing of any kind applied.
Clean, dry recording of a roughly half-filled metal can (the ribbed kind used for most canned food - probably steel, tin, or a blend of the two) containing dry oatmeal being shaken. A variety of forces and speeds were used to create a diverse assortment of sounds. Originally recorded specifically for canned oatmeal sounds, but could easily work for shaken cans containing most kinds of tiny, dry granules such as rice, nuts, grains, etc. A metal can was used for the unique, metallic timbre it produces - a glass jar or plastic container would sound different. Recorded with a behringer xm8500 directly into a steinberg ur22c interface at 48khz, 32-bit float. True 32-bit, not just 24-bit upconverted.