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.

How to Record Acoustic Guitar: Microphone Selection Guide
The difference between a guitar recording that sounds like music and one that sounds like cardboard often comes down to two decisions made in the first thirty seconds. Recording acoustic

How to Mic a Drum Kit — A Complete Guide for Home Studios
Most home recordings fail because engineers treat drum miking like placing decorations rather than capturing acoustic energy in three-dimensional space. Recording drums represents the most complex miking challenge in audio

Sample Rate and Bit Depth Explained: Recording Settings Guide
Every recording session begins with two numbers that determine whether the final mix sounds professional or falls short of broadcast standards. Sample rate and bit depth form the foundation of
All Recording & Production Guides
Every recording & production guide we’ve published, newest first.

How to Record Acoustic Guitar: Microphone Selection Guide
The difference between a guitar recording that sounds like music and one that sounds like cardboard often comes down to two decisions made in the first thirty seconds. Recording acoustic

How to Mic a Drum Kit — A Complete Guide for Home Studios
Most home recordings fail because engineers treat drum miking like placing decorations rather than capturing acoustic energy in three-dimensional space. Recording drums represents the most complex miking challenge in audio

Sample Rate and Bit Depth Explained: Recording Settings Guide
Every recording session begins with two numbers that determine whether the final mix sounds professional or falls short of broadcast standards. Sample rate and bit depth form the foundation of

How to Treat a Room for Better Audio — Acoustic Treatment Basics
Most home studios sound terrible not because of bad gear, but because untreated rooms turn great monitors into misleading liars that mask mix problems. After fifteen years mixing in everything

How to Record Professional Voice Overs at Home: Complete Guide
Most home voice over recordings fail not because of cheap equipment, but because the wrong microphone pattern captures more room than voice. Recording professional voice overs at home has become

How to Record Interviews: Microphone Setup for Two People
Most interview recordings fail because engineers treat multiple voices like a single performer scaled up, when the acoustic challenges are completely different. Recording interviews with two or more people presents

How to Set Up a Podcast — Complete Equipment Guide for Beginners
Most podcast failures stem not from poor content but from audio quality so distracting that listeners cannot focus on the message being delivered. After fifteen years mixing everything from studio

Microphone Preamps Explained: What They Do and When to Upgrade
The difference between a good recording and a great one often lies in the electronics you cannot see working between your microphone and your recorder. Microphone preamps amplify the tiny

What is a Pop Filter and Do You Actually Need One
A single plosive sound can destroy an otherwise perfect vocal take, yet many recordings happen without any protection at all. Pop filters sit between vocalists and microphones to catch the

What is Crossfeed and Should You Use It When Mixing on Headphones
Crossfeed processing fundamentally changes how stereo information reaches your ears through headphones, potentially solving one of the biggest challenges in headphone mixing. When mixing on headphones, the complete channel separation

How to Monitor with Headphones for Accurate Studio Mixing
Most mixing engineers discover too late that their headphone mix sounds completely different on speakers, revealing fundamental monitoring mistakes that destroy translation across playback systems. Headphone monitoring demands a systematic

How to Set Up a Home Recording Studio on a Budget
The difference between a £500 home studio and a £5000 one often comes down to three critical gear choices rather than buying everything at once. Setting up a home recording
