Skip to main content

Can anyone offer suggestions as to best how to use Waves De Ess?
Suggested starting points orthe best way to zero in on the offending frequency. What mode etc?
Thanks...

Topic Tags

Comments

DrGonz Thu, 09/20/2007 - 03:49

Good place to start for manuals....
http://homepage.mac.com/craigsmith/html/WavesMans.html
http://homepage.mac.com/craigsmith/PDFs/Waves%20PDFs/DeEsser.pdf

Also one way I use a de-esser is to find a setting that makes the troublsome parts go away and save the setting, say for vocals. Then I export the file to separate wave file and open in a audio editor(SoundForge). Since, I know where the trouble parts are I can now attack those sections individually. I am not sure if this a good practice but it gets the job done. Just apply the effect to each small section and leave most of the track(hopefully) unprocessed. Sometimes this does'nt always work either....

As far as the settings, if you read the manual they are self explanatory. Just one thing is the de-esser might make the a vocalist have a lisp sound. I personally think that I use the de-esser to fix things. If the recording sounds good then most of it is perfect, but just a few esssssssss'. So yup its a good tool for fixing things.

Side Note: You can attack frequencies more independently by using it in split mode. This actually will split the lows and the high frequencies into to parts. And select a hi-pass filter setting too, then focus how to balance the low to high ratios.