Recording & Production
Mic placement, monitoring with headphones, room treatment, sample rates, latency — practical technique for cleaner, better recordings at home.
Great recordings rarely happen by accident. They come from a stack of small decisions — where you put the mic, how you monitor, how the room behaves, what your interface is doing — each one nudging the result closer to or further from what you actually wanted to capture.
These guides cover the practical side of recording and production. Not the gear you should buy, but how to get more from what you have. Mic technique, monitoring discipline, treating spaces, managing signal flow — the work that separates amateur recordings from results you'd want to release.
Featured Guides
Practical technique that translates to real results.

Should You Spend More on Headphones or a Better DAC
Spend the money in the wrong order and you could own a five-hundred-pound DAC feeding headphones that cannot resolve what it is doing, or high-end cans revealing every flaw in

Best Microphones for Church and Worship in 2026: Top Picks for Clear, Confident Sound
Running sound for a church service is a different challenge from a concert or podcast studio. You need reliability above everything else — a dropout mid-sermon or a feedback squeal

Best Microphones for Interviews in 2026: Top Picks for Every Budget
Getting a great interview recording comes down to one thing more than anything else: the microphone you use. A bad mic turns a fascinating conversation into a muddy, distracting listen
All Recording & Production Guides
Every recording & production guide we’ve published, newest first.

How to Record Live Performances: Direct, Ambient, or Both
The difference between a live recording that feels alive and one that sounds like a rehearsal tape almost always comes down to a single decision made before anyone plays a

How to Set Up a Mobile Recording Rig for Travel
A mobile recording rig built without a clear signal chain in mind will cost you more in failed sessions than any gear upgrade ever could. Setting up a mobile recording

How to Record Stereo Ambience: Outdoor and Indoor Approaches
Stereo ambience is one of the most underestimated elements in audio production — get it right and it transforms a recording from flat and lifeless into something that feels genuinely

How to Tune a Room for Mixing Without Expensive Gear
The room you mix in is shaping every decision you make at the fader, and most of the time it is lying to you in ways that headphones simply cannot

How to Calibrate Studio Monitors by Ear Without Tools
Most engineers assume that calibrating studio monitors requires a measurement microphone and analysis software, but a trained pair of ears and a methodical approach can get you remarkably close to

How to Record Foley and Sound Effects at Home
The distance between a convincing sound effect and a useless one is almost never about the source material. It is about how you capture it. Foley recording has been a

How to Mic a Kick Drum: Inside, Outside, or Both
The kick drum sits at the physical and sonic foundation of almost every recorded track, and where you place the microphone determines whether that foundation feels solid or hollow, present

Overhead Drum Mic Techniques: Spaced Pair, XY, Recorderman
The overhead microphones on a drum kit do not simply capture cymbals — they define the entire spatial image of the kit, and the technique you choose shapes everything from

Diffusers vs Absorbers: When to Use Each in Your Studio
Most studios get treated rooms wrong not because the gear is bad but because the engineer reached for absorbers when the room needed diffusers, or worse, used both indiscriminately and

How to Use Bass Traps Properly in a Small Studio
Place a bass trap in the wrong position and you will spend money on foam that does almost nothing while low-end problems continue to wreck every mix you try to

How to Treat a Bedroom for Recording: Step-by-Step
An untreated bedroom does not just sound bad on its own terms — it actively works against you, adding reflections and low-frequency build-up that no plugin or equaliser can fully

How to Build a Vocal Booth at Home: Cheap to Pro Options
A room that sounds terrible on its own will still sound terrible through a thousand-pound microphone, and no amount of processing after the fact will fully undo what the walls
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Headphones Hub
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The full, honest take on one pair at a time.
Browse →How to Choose
What the specs mean and how to pick the right pair.
Browse →Looking for microphones instead? Browse our microphone reviews and guides.
