Made a plugin!

Notuern

Bloody vaginal belch
Oct 20, 2007
3,625
0
36
Hey Guise!

So i made my first plugin!

I wanted a versatile "boost"pedal, that you can use no matter what kind of music you are playing.
Its basically a series of filters to give you different type of sounds.
The voicing turns from Dark/Spungy/Muddy->Tight/Focused TS9'ish sound, and the twang adds twang! ;)

JBoost.jpg


I know it doesnt look that great, but trust me, it sounds better then it looks! ;)
Anyways, i hope you guys like it, if you dont, then feel free to say what bothers you so i can fix it for my next plugin.

JBoost(Dropbox link)

(Feel free to spread it around as much as you like to.)
 
Hey Guise!

So i made my first plugin!

I wanted a versatile "boost"pedal, that you can use no matter what kind of music you are playing.
Its basically a series of filters to give you different type of sounds.
The voicing turns from Dark/Spungy/Muddy->Tight/Focused TS9'ish sound, and the twang adds twang! ;)

JBoost.jpg


I know it doesnt look that great, but trust me, it sounds better then it looks! ;)
Anyways, i hope you guys like it, if you dont, then feel free to say what bothers you so i can fix it for my next plugin.

JBoost(Dropbox link)

(Feel free to spread it around as much as you like to.)

Mac user here :erk:But let me ask you something. I was never good on programming at college, so it might be a dumb question. I know that for programming vsts you need its SDK, but do you got any resources on how to simulate circuits with programming? Lately ive been really curious on how those things work, as it is way past my supermarket-app knowledge.
 
Mac user here :erk:But let me ask you something. I was never good on programming at college, so it might be a dumb question. I know that for programming vsts you need its SDK, but do you got any resources on how to simulate circuits with programming? Lately ive been really curious on how those things work, as it is way past my supermarket-app knowledge.

Actually... i made it using SynthEdit! ;)
So i dont really know anything about programming a VST, sorry. ;X
 
Yeah SynthEdit is quite nice to take first steps into the VST programming world. Not as complicated, but at the same time not as powerful, as the competing Synthmaker.
 
Yeah SynthEdit is quite nice to take first steps into the VST programming world. Not as complicated, but at the same time not as powerful, as the competing Synthmaker.

Yeah, Synthmaker seems to be the shit.. but i prefer to take the "baby steps" approach! ;)
But SynthEdit works great for making stuff like this, and it keeps fairly low on the CPU.
 
Thanks! :)

No other Sneapster seems to wanna try this thing out though? :(
 
Not a Windows-using Sneapster I suppose. I would have taken it to a test-drive, but I'm also on a Mac.
 
That once again reminds me, we Mac users REALLY need someone to make quality free plugins for us :( but I guess that's the tradeoff of never getting any viruses :grin:
 
If you know some C++ you could always write your own modules with the SynthEdit SDK .. or even in Pascal/Delphi, it's in the Delphi ASIO-Vst bundle by Christian Budde.. I haven't tried that myself because I'm doing everything in c++..
 
If you know some C++ you could always write your own modules with the SynthEdit SDK .. or even in Pascal/Delphi, it's in the Delphi ASIO-Vst bundle by Christian Budde.. I haven't tried that myself because I'm doing everything in c++..

Waaaaaaaaay back i knew how to do simple stuff in C++, maybe i should read up on it again! :)
And im actually using some user-made modules(Not in this particular plugin though.), mainly to lower CPU.

bidule? pluggo?

Not the one i was thinking of.. there was another program i found by mistake when searching the interwebz for new SE modules.
If my memory isnt lying, it started with "n" and consisted of 2 words. ;P
 
Waaaaaaaaay back i knew how to do simple stuff in C++, maybe i should read up on it again! :)
And im actually using some user-made modules(Not in this particular plugin though.), mainly to lower CPU.

Yeah you should ;) Especially if you're concidering doing hardware simulation :kickass: