Phase manipulation ends up being the quiet weapon for making flat mixes feel wider without wrecking mono or smearing detail.
Stereo control differences between the tools
Stereo control differences between the tools
- Noisebud 360 spins phase across the whole frequency range.
- Locks the entire sound into one global rotation.
- Feels broad and blunt by design.
- Aims at fast width without micromanagement.
- Noisebud 360Pro lets phase movement land anywhere in the spectrum.
- Targets specific frequency zones instead of everything at once.
- Enables intentional stereo decisions instead of guesswork.
- Acts more like a surgical spatial tool than an effect.
- Noisebud 360Pro opens mono vocals, synths, and instruments.
- Applies phase tweaks to one side only.
- Creates a lopsided width that still holds together in mono.
- Avoids reverb wash or modulation blur.
- Small left-right offsets introduce depth and motion.
- Mimics channel-mismatch behavior from analog EQ circuits.
- Adds subtle width without screaming processing.
- Delivers a glossy spatial lift when used lightly.
- Noisebud 360Pro handles multi-mic alignment problems.
- Tightens layered elements fighting for space.
- Fixes timing-related spatial issues without EQ moves.
- Preserves tone while cleaning the stereo picture.
- Noisebud 360 costs nothing.
- Noisebud 360Pro needs a paid Noisebud Patreon tier or purchase.
- Subscription starts at $6.
- One-time buy lands at $30.