Hmmm. Firstly, although you've described a set of sounds which could be Foley, you've not actually properly defined what Foley is.kelvyn wrote:I think it’s important to clarify the difference between Sound Design and Foley.
Foley work is usually responsible for creating natural sound effects - rainfall, footsteps, doors creaking, thunder etc.
Sound design is usually more a creative device that enhances certain elements of a film that one wouldn’t normally be described as music - crashes, booms, whooshes, zaps, electronic soundscapes etc.
Foley work is performed, that's the crucial thing about it.
'Foley sounds' is sometimes used as a catchall for those kinds of environmental and human sounds in any form (eg samples), but that's not what Foley itself is. And many of the 'Foley-type' sounds you will hear in a film are not performed may have been 'designed' or 'sweetened', especially things like weather or important environmental sounds.
Funnily enough, neither is sound design. Sound design wasnt a term created for 'someone who constructs non-musical audio elements of a film'. It was a term created (for Walter Murch's work on 'Apocalypse Now') analogously to 'set designer', ie someone who planned and created the overall thematic cohesion of the audio of a film. And that didnt necessarily involve crafting the individual sounds any more than a set designer necessarily made the furniture and did the carpentry. Or cinematographer versus cameraman...But Foley is NOT sound design in the generally accepted terminology.
'Designing the sound of the film' as opposed to 'constructing individual sounds for a film'.
Obviously as the hierarchy of sound work has shifted from the older proscribed Hollywood roles (which were very rigorously defined, eg a separation between recordist, and editor and mixer etc) which actually precluded what 'sound designer' came to do, the constructing of individual sounds has become associated with that, but the 'accepted terminology' is still, strictly speaking, somewhat inaccurate versus the actual terminology.