Here's The Velvet Cave. So called because in its first incarnation the walls and ceiling were covered in old green velvet curtains, cadged off a neighbour who was throwing them out. My partner named it, in her usual slightly sardonic way, and it stuck.
The grey panels are loose weave fabric stretched over wood frames I made out of an old fitted wardrobe. The infill is Rockwool loft insulation for sound absorption. The building is single skin brick, but with studded walls made from acoustic plasterboard with Rockwool Acoustic infill for soundproofing. It was all a bit of an experiment, but I'm happy to say that it does the job. I'm particularly impressed by the Rockwool Acoustic.
The corner-pieces house a pair of JBL Control 5's for rehearsal purposes.
The mic is a Neumann U87 and the preamp, which you can just about see in the rack at the bottom right, is an Avalon vt-737sp.
All of that goes into a Presonus Studio 68c (less impressed with this if I'm honest) and on to a custom built Windows box in the other half of the room.
The computer's OK I have to say. I was a bit dubious about the claims that were made for it with regards to noise but the extra I paid for the cooling fans and the Bequiet case were definitely worth it. I always had the option to remote the computer, but I've found that I don't need to. SCAN computers put it together, if anyone's interested.
The instruments, from left to right: A cheap student grade cello, a good quality modern viola, an early 20th century French violin, a German violin from the mid 19th century, an English violin from somewhere between 1790 and 1820, and a late 19th Century French cello. All decent bits of wood in their own way, and all with very different tonal characteristics.
The other end:
Sorry, it was dark.
This is where I arrange. The only thing of note are the Kali ultra near field monitors, which I like a lot. This is also where I do most of the editing so the fact that those speakers are utterly ruthless works for me.