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9 Comments
Sagemindsays...What...?
No Way that could be a good quality Cymbal - That's Crazy!
bamdrewsays...knocked the sand right out of it!...
bamdrewsays......ah but yes, various materials and designs will cause the wobbling around the bell to continue and ring out or dampen down faster than this... you can search for 'thin', 'thin-medium', etc. crash cymbals, with more 'attack' or more 'ring'
neat to "see" the frequency of the sound here... thanks PhantomHD!
robbersdog49says...>> ^Sagemind:
What...?
No Way that could be a good quality Cymbal - That's Crazy!
What you mean is, I didn't think Cymbals vibrated like that. If they didn't vidrate like that, where would the sound come from?
RedSkysays...If you squint and look at it the right way it kinda looks like a stingray.
Opus_Moderandisays...No audio of the cymbal hit? Lame.
And boy was that cymbal dusty.
ForgedRealitysays...If they hadn't blurred out the brand name, we could probably use that as a determinate for the quality of the cymbal.
mxxconsays...I'd hit it.
Reefiesays...Slo-mo tip #37: To make your slo-mo capture stand out from similar slo-mo capture sequences scatter a healthy handful of dust across the subject(s) that will be moving within the sequence. When capturing sequences of human movement, apply plenty of water and glycerine to the subject instead of dust.
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