Ripping a piece of office paper with the end of a pair of metal scissors, on a wooden desktop. Recorded with the xy mics on a zoom h1, and a bit of eq to get rid of handling noise in audition.
Squelching sound effect of blood/stabbing/flesh/gore. Donate: https://www. Paypal. Com/paypalme/andrewweigh. (i’m a student and would love to upgrade my audio gear, so if you like/download any of my audio then that would be greatly appreciated! no worries if not). Looking for more audio?. Try:. Youtube: https://www. Youtube. Com/channel/ucdsjqeyevdku7sqyn3qlrta. Freesound: https://freesound. Org/people/sounddesignforyou/.
This is me ripping a piece of paper, which resulted in a sharp, crisp sound of tearing. I think it could also very effectively be used to simulate the sound of a roll of packing tape being applied to a package.
A recording of me slowly and exaggeratedly tearing a piece of a4 paper up into little pieces. This can be interpreted as a character doing just that (casually or furiously) or someone opening a present at a birthday/christmas party. Date recorded: 09/05/2021.
A brief ripping sound of tearing cloth. It could also be used for sticky tape being yanked off the roll. (my apologies for the bird calls in the background, field-recordings are difficult in a rural area. ).
This is my old bedsheet being torn apart with bare hands. I have recorded this in 96khz/24-bit with a zoom h2, then normalized and saved as a 16-bit. This sample has a lot of sounds of tearing (unedited) so i think anyone can find something useful in it :).
I was looking for the sound of fabric ripping for a video i am working on and couldn't find anything suitable so i created my own. Three different cloth ripping noises. Two are short and one is a little longer. Recorded with my olympus ls-7.
**loud** velcro pulling apart - slow, fast, intermittent. I used a 3 inch wide piece of velcro, so the sound has a lot of presence and depth. Recorded with stereo nt1a mics in a soundbooth. No effects.
Distinct sounds of opening a paper envelope, pulling out a letter and moving the paper around in different ways. This was originally recorded for a theatre play with a pantomime sequence of handling a letter. Recorded with a matched pait of rode nt 5 microphones.
A sound made by running my finger nail over a sheet of notebook paper. While no paper was torn, it sounds surprisingly like tearing paper and could be suitable for that.