Hidden Symmetry Posted September 21, 2020 Posted September 21, 2020 Developed in collaboration with 3x Grammy® Producer, Mixing & Mastering engineer Luca Pretolesi, Diamond Transient is a two-plugin suite that completely redefines the way you work with dynamics. Derived from a series of select American dynamic processors, we aimed at creating a tool that would let you easily complete a variety of creative task in just a few moves, and without sacrificing the analog character that made Studio DMI's line of signature plugins a staple in virtually every modern studio. Introductory price: €119 (reg. €189) You’ll save 37%!* https://www.acustica-audio.com/store/products/diamond-transient
cclarry Posted September 21, 2020 Posted September 21, 2020 119 Euros, minus your personal discount, minus the extra 15% off my price was 80 Euros...still too much
Hidden Symmetry Posted September 21, 2020 Author Posted September 21, 2020 (edited) On 9/21/2020 at 10:35 AM, cclarry said: 119 Euros, minus your personal discount, minus the extra 15% off my price was 80 Euros...still too much $45.00 for me.. I'll wait to demo before I judge it, haven't had time. Edited September 28, 2020 by Hidden Symmetry 1
Hidden Symmetry Posted September 22, 2020 Author Posted September 22, 2020 Trial update is up- rel B004 now has 48/88.2 kHz samples & a comb filtering issue fixed. 1
Hidden Symmetry Posted September 28, 2020 Author Posted September 28, 2020 Here's a tutorial from Luca Pretolesi.
tom Posted September 28, 2020 Posted September 28, 2020 Hmm will watch this as I just cannot get this plugin to do anything useful
Hidden Symmetry Posted September 28, 2020 Author Posted September 28, 2020 1 hour ago, tom said: Hmm will watch this as I just cannot get this plugin to do anything useful I only tried it briefly. I had to back down the HF to start. Since this is partly from Luca's studio chain I get the feeling it's using the same HF emulation from Lift or Diamond. Once I dialed it down I could deal with it better. I still feel this is better suited for dance music. When I get more time I'll work with it some more, think parallel mixing might be the key here. Could be useful on stems or busses too, not sure yet.
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