What's "Dry"?
The dry part is the original sound, it’s like the paint you started with. If you hear just the dry sound, it feels simple, almost like it's coming from a room without any echoes.
What's "Wet"?
The wet part is when you add effects or make the sound richer, like adding new paint to your color. It might be like hearing your voice in a big echoey hall, or music that feels full and layered.
When you mix dry and wet together, it’s like mixing two colors on your palette, you get something new and more interesting!
You can think of it as turning a knob: when the dry is high, you hear the original sound clearly; when the wet is high, you feel the added effects. It's all about balance! Imagine you're mixing paints to make a new color, that’s what dry/wet is like in audio.
When you listen to music or sounds on your device, there are two parts: the original sound (like paint you already have) and the new effect or mix (like the paint you’re adding).
What's "Dry"?
The dry part is the original sound, it’s like the paint you started with. If you hear just the dry sound, it feels simple, almost like it's coming from a room without any echoes.
What's "Wet"?
The wet part is when you add effects or make the sound richer, like adding new paint to your color. It might be like hearing your voice in a big echoey hall, or music that feels full and layered.
When you mix dry and wet together, it’s like mixing two colors on your palette, you get something new and more interesting!
You can think of it as turning a knob: when the dry is high, you hear the original sound clearly; when the wet is high, you feel the added effects. It's all about balance!
Examples
- A dry signal is like a voice recorded in a quiet room, while a wet signal has added reverb, making it sound like the voice is in a large hall.
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See also
- How Does The Loudness War Work?
- How Music Got Loud (The Loudness Wars Explained)?
- How Does Loudness Standards: Perfecting Audio Work?
- 5 cm to inches?
- 1212 ~ Number Synchronicities ~ Are You Seeing This ?