Due to the curfew there where some months that I had to be home before 21:00 so after regular day of work the separate studio wasn’t tempting. Had the same initial thought, being more productive if i will travel to separate studio and sit there to make music but in reality hours fly by so fast that it doesn’t work for me. The danger would also be if it’s too far away and that then putting you off going as often. I think having somewhere separate and scheduling regular times could be good for motivating you to actually do something, but then it could kill spontaneous ideas at other times. I found that taking one or two boxes down to the sofa and trying to work on stuff there can be a nice change, but then I can get distracted by whatever my partner is watching on TV.įor my metal band, we have a dedicated practice space and regular timeslots which obviously works much better in that case as there are multiple people involved. This means that I am either struggling to not be distracted from work and have to try to ignore all the equipment around me, or that when I get to the end of a day of work, I really don’t want to stay in the same room to make music. I’ve been thinking about this exact situation recently too.Ĭurrently my ‘studio’ is the same room that I work since I’ve been working from home for over a year now. My ideal scenario would be an outhouse studio on my future bit of land, but I think I may be in the wrong career to ever make that happen The pros of having a proper space to work in massively outweigh the cons. I just got a sub at home and that helps a lot haha.īut yeah, having something at home that I can lay down a basic idea on, and some decent listening situation to hear what I’ve worked on is a must. I always miss having something though, whether it’s the prophet or the full size keyboard or my guitar…. My happy mid-ground is that once in a while I bring a small amount of gear home, mainly my Rytm, and just focus on that for a couple of days… but then when I go back to the studio I need a couple of hours of plugging everything back in. Having a bedroom just being a bedroom is very good and necessary for my mental health… but I do miss being able to lay down ideas any time of day or night. Now I have a studio and it is amazing having the two spaces. What I didn’t like was it being the space for everything I did, so never feeling like I had a break from it… we used to rehearse a 5 piece band in there, cables everywhere, and everyone would leave and it would remain a mess until I occasionally finally sorted it out. I used to have everything set up in my room and loved sometimes being able to stay up til 4am just noodling away. So, maybe having a separate studio where you need to travel a short distance is actually better for creativity, as you kind of forget your daily grind when transitioning from home to studio and get in a more creative headspace? What do you guys think, which do you prefer? I make music more often than before, but I’m not sure I get more actual music done. Now I’ve realised however that despite having all my gear available all the time, I still get those ideas but stopping whatever I’m doing, possibly patching & setting up the right synth for the job, powering up everything and setting up a DAW session is often enough work to make me lose interest. When I made the transition from dedicated practise studio to a home studio, I thought that I would make a lot more music, since when I was at home I constantly came up with cool musical ideas and was kind of bummed that I couldn’t make a quick demo for later use immediately. Like the shirt in the video? Help us out by purchasing a t-shirt! The sale of each t-shirt goes towards funding our next tutorial video.I’ve been thinking, which is actually better for being creative? I now have a modest home studio, probably not as good as something I could build in a dedicated space with good sound proofing & acoustics but still enough to make music. If you are planing on printing t-shirts at home, our most popular custom screen is the large 43t mesh (23 x 31 inch) pre-exposed screen, link here : We supply custom screens with your image pre-burned onto the mesh. How to expose a screen for screen printing.Social media masterclass for creative entrepreneurs. Screen printing multi-colour posters using hinge clamps.How to start screen printing your own t-shirts.Sign up to Skillshare using our link and you can get all of our screen printing courses for FREE. GET 1 MONTH FREE OF SCREEN PRINTING COURSES You can also check out our blog post ‘How we print film positives for screen printing’ : HOW WE PRINT FILM POSITIVES FOR SCREEN PRINTINGĬomplete one of our downloadable Screen Printing Courses and become a pro! Watch the full video here ^^^ or download the video for FREE by adding to cart.
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