The Spooky Jar - Kirsten McDowell

Boo!

I recently finished up some sound design work for my good friend and environment artist Kirsten McDowell on her Spooky Jar project, so here’s a quick post now that the project’s wrapped.

The Spooky Jar is an environment art scene that Kirsten made for her final year honours project at Futureworks. The bar’s design is inspired by the The Whiskey Jar, a whiskey bar (who’d have guessed?) in Manchester’s Northern Quarter. Unlike the Whiskey Jar however, The Spooky Jar is home to some cheeky ghosts and ghoulies who have come out to play, and presumably neck a few drinks along the way!

You can see the scene in full detail and get more info on the design process by heading over to Kirsten’s ArtStation page to check out the bar and its 3D-modelled props in all their glory. Plus, while you’re in a link-clicking mood, you should also follow her on Twitter too so you can keep up with the rest of her environment and game design work as well!

Here’s a flythrough video showcase of the scene:

I worked on the sound design for this video showcase, which was a lot of fun! The brief was to create a spooky yet cosy vibe for the piece through area (non-positional) and source (positional) ambience sounds.

Most of the sounds I designed were sourced from my sound effects library, but I did get chance to do some field recording for a few choice elements in the scene. For example, to record the ouija board glass movement sounds, I grabbed my trusty (but hissy) H4n recorder, a wooden chopping board and a nice, weighty glass tumbler and had a good ol’ scrape about! After chucking the recordings into Reaper and applying a bit of EQ and Brusfri to remove top-end hiss and room tone, I had this:

I also recorded this creaky, crackly book which I intended to try and use for some of the dusty paper menus and posters in the scene.

However, although these crunchy book sounds were cool, I felt they didn’t work too well with my audio direction for the scene, and that they sounded a bit too over the top and out of place for the I overall mood I was aiming for, so I took them out. Not to worry though - I’ll no doubt go back to this recording for the next project that needs some extra crunchy ice sound design I think!

As I was mixing my sounds to a linear piece of media, and not implementing them directly into the UE4 project, I decided to replicate the feel of the audio being played back by the game engine by keeping a lot of the positional source sounds (door creaks, neon sign buzzes etc.) mono. This way, I could pan them around the environment according to the position of the camera, to give the feel the player is actively moving around the scene in engine in real-time.

Here’s a shot from my Reaper session where I’ve used track panning to position diegetic source sounds in the scene in relation to the position of the camera. In this sequence of shots (02:15 - 02:28) the camera gradually moves from left to right through the environment, so I positioned the creaks and closing sounds of the door in this shot according to where an in-game listener on the camera would likely pick them up.

Anyway, it’s coming up to closing time on this post, so thanks for having a look and listen to the sounds of The Spooky Jar - it was a short but sweet project that was great to work on! Stay safe out there folks! :)