Are there any Desaturator vst`s that remove as much harmonic content from the sound as needed?

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So there`s the whole question :)

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There's declippers,but you wont find anything that can actually remove from material that is rich in harmonics.the best you can do if the harmonics were added by something like a waveshaper is to use the inverted curve to scale down the harmonics,but if the wave itself has been shaped at all by the first transfer curve,you wont get the "desaturated"signal back.you'll just have the same sound but with an increased dynamic range
I

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ok, thanks!

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Maybe try transpire

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Look into what certain FFT based editors can do. RX or maybe Spectral layers.

Not easy but its doable if you put in some work.
:borg:

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V0RT3X wrote: Sat Sep 19, 2020 5:43 pm Look into what certain FFT based editors can do. RX or maybe Spectral layers.

Not easy but its doable if you put in some work.
This, RX and other suspects let you select harmonics automatically which you can then alter in volume (and apply fades if needed) or you can select them manually.
Last edited by Sampleconstruct on Sat Sep 19, 2020 7:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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what are you trying to achieve?
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sound with less harmonics.

just tried Izotope Rx, seems what I need! thanks

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A low pass filter, lol.

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A LPF wouldn't tuned to the harmonics.

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Not really sure, but maybe this could also be an option?
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yes, thanks!

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sinkmusic wrote: Sun Sep 20, 2020 10:30 am A LPF wouldn't tuned to the harmonics.
tracking EQ LPF then
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anti_phase wrote: Sat Sep 19, 2020 7:56 pm sound with less harmonics.

just tried Izotope Rx, seems what I need! thanks
desaturating something like a piano vs desaturating something like a sinewave is not the same and i'd approach it differently.
i.e. for a "clipped" saturation of a piano i'd go with RX declipper.

for desaturating a sine wave i'd use a filter..
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in that case I had to specify that I wanted to desaturate complex signals and not sinewavs

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