Autumn is acoustically weird. It sits between the density of summer where everything is alive and active and filling up the spectrum, and winter where the landscape gets quiet and sparse and you can hear individual events clearly.
Autumn doesn’t do either of those things cleanly, it’s somewhere in between, and that in-between aesthetic is exactly what makes it useful for sound design and also what makes it so difficult to actually go out and record properly.
That’s the reason SEASONS OF EARTH – EUROPEAN AUTUMN was made. It was built for professional sound designers who need believable European exterior ambiences set in autumn, and who don’t have the time or access to go capture them on location.
The series already covers Spring, Summer, and Winter, all recorded with the same rig and approach to geographic accuracy, and Autumn completes it.
Why autumn is hard to capture well
The seasonal window is short, we don’t get long to get this right. Depending on the location and the weather you might have a few weeks where the environment actually sounds like autumn rather than late summer or early winter, and even within that window conditions shift constantly.
Wind behaviour changes throughout the day, leaf cover on the ground builds up and affects how everything sounds at ground level, and bird activity follows its own timings that don’t always line up with when everything else is cooperating.
This library includes forest ambiences, grassland wind beds, leaf rustle and vegetation movement, branch and thicket motion, red deer rutting calls, wolf howls, and a range of bird activity, including woodpeckers, ravens, and cranes in grassland environments, and smaller forest birds too. You’ll also find the frantic rustling of mice making the most of the last food before winter sets in. All of that was captured on location in European forests and grasslands during actual autumn conditions, and it reflects the kind of variable conditions that define the season rather than trying to smooth it out into something more predictable.
The ORTF-3D approach – Immersive done right
Everything in SEASONS OF EARTH – EUROPEAN AUTUMNÂ was recorded using a Schoeps ORTF-3D rig, which is the same setup used across the rest of the Seasons of Earth series. The reason that matters is because you get genuine spatial separation in the recordings, the leaf rustle and ground level detail sits in its own space, the bird activity has real positioning and distance, and the wind layers have natural depth. It’s captured spatially from the rig out, which makes a real difference when you’re working in Atmos or any immersive format where artificial width tends to fall apart pretty quickly. Learn more about working with immersive audio in our blog here.
The stereo edition is worth mentioning specifically because it’s a dedicated capture, not a fold-down from the surround files. Folding down a 3D recording to stereo can compromise something, phase relationships change and the spatial image collapses in ways that are hard to fix afterwards, so the decision was made early on in the series to run stereo and surround as separate capture paths. This means more work on location, but it means both editions actually perform properly in post.

What autumn actually sounds like in a recording
The defining characteristic of autumn as a recording environment is movement. Leaves on the ground react to wind, to temperature shifts across the day, to birds moving through the underbrush. Branches load up under wind and create stress sounds that you don’t hear in summer when everything is still heavy with foliage. The bird activity has a different quality too, it’s more episodic with bursts from specific species and then stretches where the wind and vegetation take over rather than the constant wall of song you get in spring.
The library captures that range. You’ll find calm midday forest beds alongside breezy conditions with active leaf movement, deep wind gusts in open grassland alongside lighter passes through forest vegetation. The crane recordings from grassland environments capture something very specific to European autumn that you won’t find in a generic forest library, and the woodpecker and raven activity gives the forest beds a seasonal character that’s immediately recognisable if you know what European woodland actually sounds like at that time of year.

Created by professionals to help professionals
SEASONS OF EARTH – EUROPEAN AUTUMN was designed for professional sound designers and editors working in film, TV, documentary, and games who need seasonal accuracy in their exterior scenes.
If you’re cutting a drama set in northern Europe and the script says October, generic forest ambience won’t sell it. The same goes for game environments where seasonal transitions need to sound distinct and not fake, and for anyone mixing in Atmos or spatial formats who needs source material with real spatial information captured at the rig rather than synthesised in post.
Everything is delivered at 24-bit / 96 kHz WAV with full metadata, organised by habitat and activity type so the files search quickly and drop into a session without a lot of unnecessary work.
We’ve put a lot of time and effort into this library to make your work in post so much easier. SEASONS OF EARTH – EUROPEAN AUTUMN is one of those seasons that comes up in projects constantly but the conditions are unpredictable and the recording window is narrow, which makes it a pain to go out and capture yourself. That’s the whole point of Seasons of Earth as a series, capturing these environments properly so you don’t have to, and with SEASONS OF EARTH – EUROPEAN AUTUMN the collection is finally complete. We hope it saves you time, and we’re confident it’ll sound right the moment it hits your timeline. That’s always been our goal.





