Cut up a recording of an old grandfather clock, removed the noisy whirring in between ticks, and added long dreamy reverb that grows a bit towards the end. .
This is the sound of an old clock and it's pendulum swinging back and forth. Recorded with a sound devices mixpre 3ll in stereo with a pair of audio technica at943 microphones.
This is the unique sound of two clocks, both sitting on a shelf in my living room. Although this sound is completely free to use without credit, i would appreciate it if give me credit if you happen to use this sound.
A zoom h6 recorder was used, with the xy capsule to get a better range of the clock when held very close to it. The clock is made out of wood with two steel arms and a plastic seconds arm.
No thrills here. This is a 1940's german mantel-clock ticking. Recorded on a mac using a samson co3u microphone (usb connected). Straight recording, just noise removal and fade out at the end.
Me tapping a series of objects on a block of heavy, toothy paper. A pencil eraser, metal nail file, empty straw wrapper, a metal hole-punch, and a crinkled wadded up paper.
Very short tick. This is a sound i found on my forest recording. Something must have fallen on my mics. It made a very nice, clean and natural tick sound. I cut it out from the ambient sound normalized, made a little fade-out and saved as 24-bit flac. The original recording was 96khz/24bit.
This is a knife i use often at my workplace cutting different materials. It’s called an ofla knife- they’re pretty small and can retract and come back out again with a drag of a switch. This is me dragging that switch up and down, slowly for each individual tick and then all at once. I know in this recording the background isn’t completely silent, i’ll try to reupload a recording when it is at some point.