ethanjamescolez
New member
1/3
Question for people who post build progress, paint demos, tool technique clips, kit notes, or diorama videos.
If the spoken notes are useful but compressor noise, sanding, cutting, room sound, camera noise, or background music makes the voice hard to hear, do you clean up the narration before posting?
I am not talking about hiding a build mistake, making a kit review sound cleaner than it was, or using the forum as a shop advert. I mean an owned clip where the explanation should be easier to follow.
The checks I would use are:
If the spoken notes are useful but compressor noise, sanding, cutting, room sound, camera noise, or background music makes the voice hard to hear, do you clean up the narration before posting?
I am not talking about hiding a build mistake, making a kit review sound cleaner than it was, or using the forum as a shop advert. I mean an owned clip where the explanation should be easier to follow.
The checks I would use are:
- keep the original recording as the reference
- do not remove tool, compressor, sanding, cutting, snap-fit, handling, airbrush, or paint-process sounds that matter
- avoid background music unless I have rights to use it
- preview any separated voice/background result before saving it
- listen for artifacts that make the process feel less honest
- disclose meaningful edits if the clip supports a review or troubleshooting question