Understanding Phase Shifts in Shape2 Advanced + A Free Plugin for everyone! Noisebud, 2024, November 142025, May 27 Hey everyone! I’ve been getting some questions about why the phase looks so unusual when measuring the Shape2 Advanced plugin in Plugin Doctor. To help explain what’s going on, I’m sharing a tool that I use in the video. It’s a special filter plugin I built for myself over a year ago—a unique linear-phase filter called SPLITT (it’s actually the same filter used in Shape2 Advanced). And here’s the best part: I’m giving it away as a freebie for you all! 🎉 Even though it’s quite specialized, I hope some of you will find it useful. It’s not your everyday filter, but if you’re into sound design and need some creative control over your frequency bands, this might come in handy. What SPLITT Does SPLITT is a linear-phase filter designed for splitting a signal into two bands—upper and lower—so you can process each separately. It’s also great for combining two different masters in a weird and fun way: use the low-band from one and the upper band from another, for example. As you probably understand by now, this is not meant for typical filtering tasks, but it offers a lot of flexibility for unique use cases! Quick Start Guide Here’s a rundown of the controls to get you started: Crossover: Set the frequency where the split will happen. Lower frequencies can be tricky to set with the knob, but you can type the exact value by clicking on the number below the knob. Taps: This adjusts the steepness of the filter. Higher values make the filter steeper, but they can also be taxing on your CPU. For most tasks, staying between 200-900 should work well, though you might need higher values (up to around 8000) if you’re working with very low frequencies (0–60 Hz). Pro tip: The maximum value (20000) is extremely CPU-intensive—use with caution! Matrix Controls: These options let you route the low and high bands individually: In LP (Low-Passed): Choose whether the low-band audio comes from the main stereo input (1-2) or the sidechain (3-4 input). In HP (High-Passed): Choose whether the high-band audio comes from the main stereo input (1-2) or the sidechain (3-4 input). LP Out: Set whether the low-band output goes to the main stereo output (1-2) or the 3-4 output channels. HP Out: Set whether the high-band output goes to the main stereo output (1-2) or the 3-4 output channels. Splitt has been moved to its own post:https://www.patreon.com/posts/127200822 Blog
Vintage Speaker 2013, April 14 Sol is working with an ambisonic + mono piece called “In Memoria”, the mono thing will be a single speaker playing a monolog by a man so the speaker represent the man himself so to say. Sol wanted the speaker to be old or at least look old. We found… Read More
Noisebud Leaky 4 – Introducing phase rotation 2025, September 102025, September 15 Leaky has always been one of those tools that can completely change how you work with stereo material. It lets you “leak” a selected part of the spectrum from Left, Right, Sum, or Difference into another channel, which is incredibly powerful for fixing phase problems, rebalancing stereo images, or doing… Read More
A tip for Mac users 2012, December 29 We get a lot of Mac versions requests of our VST’s. We decided long ago that we won’t put in the time needed to compile for Mac since we make plugins that we need our self’s and not to satisfy others (we use PC’s). At first we made them available since our… Read More