There's more than meets the eye
Register now to unlock all subforums. As a guest, your view is limited to only a part of The Sound Board.

UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Instruments, effects, DAWs -- any hardware or software we use to make music. Anyone can view, any member can contribute.
Post Reply

Topic author
Guy Rowland
Posts: 16256
Joined: Aug 02, 2015 8:11 pm
Location: UK
Contact:

UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by Guy Rowland »

For those among us doing sound work, this looks like a very good update. Some of these examples feel way OTT to me, but looking at the controls I think it will be fairly trivial to dial it back.





Lots of great additions to footsteps - clothing, accessories etc, plus animal stuff too.

$129 intro price, $59 for those with Walker 1.
https://www.uvi.net/walker-2

User avatar

lofi
Posts: 579
Joined: Nov 01, 2018 4:15 pm
Contact:

Re: UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by lofi »

I’ve been enjoying the first version, mostly due to its tight pro tools integration.
So I’ve upgraded.
Will install next time am in the studio.

/Anders

User avatar

soundbylaura
Posts: 542
Joined: Jun 25, 2017 8:34 pm
Contact:

Re: UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by soundbylaura »

This looks very interesting. I might rent it for next month as I have a short film gig on the way. Good use of the subscription model in this case, perhaps.
Be an upstander.


Topic author
Guy Rowland
Posts: 16256
Joined: Aug 02, 2015 8:11 pm
Location: UK
Contact:

Re: UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by Guy Rowland »

soundbylaura wrote: Aug 28, 2022 9:36 pm This looks very interesting. I might rent it for next month as I have a short film gig on the way. Good use of the subscription model in this case, perhaps.
Yes, agreed - 24 euros for a month is a great way to trial something by using it properly in anger. If it were just Walker you're interested in and you both like it and think you will use it ongoing, I guess it then makes sense to buy in a sale - currently it's 5 months worth of subscription to buy outright.


Topic author
Guy Rowland
Posts: 16256
Joined: Aug 02, 2015 8:11 pm
Location: UK
Contact:

Re: UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by Guy Rowland »

I've just got this - it's good. My main criticism is that everything by default sounds way too close. I think they mic everything 3 inches from the source. The trainers / sneakers all have a much too pronounced thud to them, for example, more like a dress shoe. There are two most obvious tools for compensating, the EQ and the distance controls. But it's still not entirely convincing, much like a close miced trumpet doesn't sound the same as one miced from a distance in a room.

Fortunately there are a boat load of other options, and here I was getting much better results. As well as all the shoe variations themselves (all recorded the same damn away) there are several slots for accessories, I found adding a lot of leather to the trainer and reducing the main sound was a lot more convincing, especially when eq and distance are used. A lot of these effects - clothes, guns, chains, cowbells for cows - are subtle by default, I enjoyed making them a lot less subtle by increasing the randomness amount greatly and the gain. Also the scuff sounds are sometimes more convincing than the main footfalls, even when used at footfalls.

I wish they'd recorded a distant mic at source and let us choose between the two - I mean, the ratio of very close shoe shots to distant in film and TV is about 0.1% - 99.9% at best. Nevertheless many of the other features do compensate to a significant degree, and with some care the product should work well in a mix.

User avatar

lofi
Posts: 579
Joined: Nov 01, 2018 4:15 pm
Contact:

Re: UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by lofi »

Haven't had the time to try it yet.
The backlog of being sick for four days!?!

Re: 2close
I understand we all have different workflows.
By default I double my dialogue reverbs to my foley channels, sometimes you need more room but most of the time they'll match pretty good.
When I've set all the levels and different rooms, I mostly use Indoor and Space, I copy the plugins to the foley-reverb-channels.
Done :)
Then again I'm one of those who likes the "sound stage"-sound and not the ADR-sound.

I think the BOOM footstep library has the most intuitive workflow when it comes to distance and placement.
High and Lowpass-filter and a reverb mapped to the mod wheel.
Super easy, works incredibly well.

Cheers,
Anders

User avatar

soundbylaura
Posts: 542
Joined: Jun 25, 2017 8:34 pm
Contact:

Re: UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by soundbylaura »

Guy Rowland wrote: Aug 29, 2022 3:34 am
soundbylaura wrote: Aug 28, 2022 9:36 pm This looks very interesting. I might rent it for next month as I have a short film gig on the way. Good use of the subscription model in this case, perhaps.
Yes, agreed - 24 euros for a month is a great way to trial something by using it properly in anger. If it were just Walker you're interested in and you both like it and think you will use it ongoing, I guess it then makes sense to buy in a sale - currently it's 5 months worth of subscription to buy outright.
For Walker it's actually rent to own, so if I only did a month at least it would go toward that. Buying it is certainly an option, I just don't know if I'll ever need it again. This is my first short film, who knows if there will be more.

Edward, the other footsteps foley instrument, also has a sub model at $35/mo.
Be an upstander.


Topic author
Guy Rowland
Posts: 16256
Joined: Aug 02, 2015 8:11 pm
Location: UK
Contact:

Re: UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by Guy Rowland »

Anders, my issue with being too close is that you are dealing with something unnatural almost always, and all efforts to correct that using effects never quite get it to the right sonic place.

I don't know what others do these days, but I always found best ADR voice results would be when using a 416 or similar in the booth, with the speaker not super-close - 4-5 feet away, say. That immediately gets you into the right ballpark as it matches location audio, and is the sound of dialogue we're all used to. If you treat it like a voiceover, you have all that huge bass tip-up and ASMR type effects you have to do whatever you can to get rid of.

Now footsteps typically are further away from boom mics than mouths. So sonically we're used to a good 10-12 feet between them and a mic. Were I recording a foley library - I have zero intention of ever doing this of course - that's where I'd start. Any room effects would still come after that.

One effect I'd like to have seen in Walker is a basic envelope shaper. Blunting the attack is another tool that might help make things sound a little less crisp and close. You can use it afterwards of course, but then you'd be best adding all reverb afterwards too.


wst3
Posts: 3919
Joined: Sep 16, 2015 4:56 pm
Location: The Western Philly 'burbs
Contact:

Re: UVI Walker 2 foley instrument

Post by wst3 »

I do (or did anyway) use footsteps and the like frequently, and right about the time that Walker was released so was Cinema Sound/Impact Soundworks Foley library. I really wrestled with that choice, and ultimately I found that the Cinema Sound library fit my workflow better. If I could I'd own both.

Post Reply