Starlight wrote:Thin plastic is not wrong if what it does acoustically is what you are wanting.
Starlight is correct - that's a big if though
If you are ok with the safety aspects, I can tell you some applications where I would not leave it acoustically to chance;
1) Anywhere there are potential first or second reflection points from speakers to the mix position. Bear in mind that you may move your speakers around to optimise sound once treatment is in place.
2) If I was building a "vocal booth" from gobos. Don't want these reflections in the mic.
Where I think it might be useful acoustically;
1) Building a small gobo fort behind an acoustic guitar to bring some reflections and a more balanced / less close mic'd sound to the mic. However, your gobos will have a wooden panel on one side anyway that will already serve that purpose.
2) In areas of your control room definitely not in mix position first or second reflection points.
With this in mind you could potentially build all your room treatment without coverings at first, and measure the response. Then add the plastic one panel at a time, measure again, and see if it has made things better or worse. On panels where it makes things worse, use your more expensive liner instead. Once you have the room optimised, cover with fabric and hope it doesn't change the HF response too much.
A more experienced acoustician may be able to make exact predictions about where the plastic would be useful or not, but that's beyond my confidence level I'm afraid
I think wanting a good looking and sounding result is a worthwhile goal. People often hear with their eyes, and your studio, recordings, mixes etc. will be judged harshly if they are made in a place that looks like a lashup. Even if they sound great.
The thing is, you are wanting something that sounds great and looks great. It's worth pointing out an adage a friend of mine uses: "buy cheap, buy twice". Sometimes the only way to get something correct is to spend more than you expected to. Sometimes buying something twice isn't a such big deal. Having to redo an entire room worth of panels and traps is a really big deal though. The time and labour alone is a huge cost.
Just my opinion - take your time, spend what is required, measure twice, cut once, and get the correct result first time. You and others will be enjoying the result for years to come, long after the extra $ have been forgotten.
Cheers,
Jennifer