I folded a belt in half and pushed it inwards and pulling it outwards violently about 30 cm away from the mic. This was recorded at the open window institute sound booth in centurion, south africa.
A more grim, horror-focused version of spooky snap 1 - pitch automation is applied. The base is the same - a strong, resonating clink of glass by using a flat metallic surface to generate the sound.
Stinger like sound effect which could be used for impact-horror scenes in which something outside the usual morality or humanities have occured. Made from pitch-shifted glass clinking, layering & stereophonic delay.
Happy accident: recorded a finger snap on a asus t100's internal laptop as a test sound, applied (heavy leveller, normalization)*10 and this came out. Sounds like a fine punch/damage sound on speakers, maybe for a 8-bit game.
It 's the same snap. Thank you all. . . . Now use your favourite reverbthis sound i used has an "attribution" license, so please give credit to:-"snap foley" by akelley6 of freesound. Orghttps://freesound. Org/people/akelley6/sounds/453046/.
I bravely snapped a pencil into three pieces and this is the sound it made when i broke the first bit off. All of my other pencils are now scared of me. Olympus ls-5, built-in mic capsules, no filtering.
I bravely snapped a pencil into three pieces. This is the sound it made when i broke the second bit off. Nobody lends me pencils anymore. Olympus ls-5, built-in mic capsules, no filtering.
I also uploaded neck-snap_short and neck-snap_up-tempo. These are all the same sound with _short being the file with the fastest tempo. All sounded like bones crunching to me, but the source was actually the sound of a boot stepping on a pair of dry pine cones from an austrian pine. Use it for whatever it sounds like to you.