For architects and acoustic consultants, Waveshell offers:
Waves Audio uses a "shell" system to wrap their many plugins into a single file.
Instead of having 200 separate plugin files, Waves bundles them. When your DAW scans this "Shell," it asks the shell, "What plugins are inside you?" The shell reports the list (e.g., C4, L1, Renaissance Compressor). waveshell
For decades, we have treated sound like a liquid—something to be poured into containers, filtered through pipes, and sprayed at an audience. WaveShell changes that physics. It treats sound like what it actually is: a sculptural object.
Hidden inside a matte-black housing no larger than a coffee-table book, WaveShell is the first consumer audio processor to abandon "frequency response" in favor of "topological acoustics." Instead of asking "How loud is this frequency?" it asks "What is the shape of this wave?" Instead of having 200 separate plugin files, Waves
Your DAW crashes while scanning the WaveShell folder.
Unlike static processing, Waveshell dynamically adjusts its internal bit depth. When the audio signal is quiet, the shell reduces quantization noise automatically. When a loud transient hits, the shell opens up to full 32-bit floating point or even 64-bit depth. This results in a noise floor that is perceptibly lower than standard 24-bit recordings. Unlike static processing
Getting started with Waveshell requires a compatible host. Most modern DAWs (Logic Pro, Ableton Live 11+, Cubase 12+, REAPER) support the Waveshell VST3 or AAX format.
Step-by-Step Guide: