Cortiça; My New Mics For (Field) Recording!
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- Опубликовано: 14 апр 2024
- Cortiça is a 48V phantom-powered omni-directional microphone with high sensitivity and very low noise. Housed in rugged small enclosure of natural cork and metal. Its capability to zoom in on very delicate sounds is what makes it special. Best used for recording scenarios that need clear and precise sound, even in noisy surroundings.
After three years of laying low and developing my new products it's finally time to present my first in a line of new products: the Cortiça Omnidirectional Condenser Microphone! There is more where this is coming from, but we start with the basics: great sound for (field) recording, in a very small package!
Get more information and purchase your own Cortiça Omnidirectional Condenser Microphones here:
www.sonicartefacts.com
Thank you to my friends @Hainbach, Ensemble KNM Berlin & Joao Ricardo / Henrique Fernandes at Sonoscopia for their help in making this video possible.
Follow us on instagram:
/ sonicartefacts
More about Wouter's other instruments and music you can find here:
www.wouterjaspers.com - Видеоклипы
Good looking mics and I like the sound they produce. They are almost smaller than the xlr connector😊
Sounds fantastic. ordered.
Well done! Looks a very exciting, interesting and useful set of tools!
I like the cork look a lot, would be a perfect fit for the cork flooring in my studio ;)
Its such a great material, thanks for reminding me I should redo my studio floor in cork too :)!
@@wouterjaspers It is! Great thinking to use it for mics
Fantastic! Look forward to discovering your new endeavours
Thank you!
❤
i need someone who can create something that can plug right into my zoom f3 with no cable. mic direct into it in omni.
I have to say, what impresses me most of all is how incredibly inexpensive you've managed to make them! Could you tell me what capsule it is and / or what the actual frequency range is? Because on your webpage it says they only go to 20khz, but the chart suggests they have a much higher frequency range, which is what I'm looking for.
Guessing Primo EM272 or similar.
Looks to be the PUI AOM 5024