tapestries and posters help with sound absorption?


I have bare walls and wooden floors, and I sit about 6ft from my rig with my back against the wall. Would a tapestry directly behind me help with bright sound? what about a small carpet? I also get a lot of compressed foam posters from work, would those help? thanks for the help
bundee1
GMC/Lugnut Thanks for the info. I am concerned too about airborne fiberglass fibers in the air and that's important in considering the material. I had built some room treatments in my last house with 2/4's and fiberglass insulation batts and noticed a lot of dust in the air.

For anyone interested I just ordered and have received plans for homegrown acoustic treatments from decware. Blueprints and have bought a LOT of MDF both 1/2 inch and 3/4 inch. I'll let you know how it turns out. For the curious:

http://www.decware.com/room.htm

I have to say after reading the white papers I understand these issues more than I have in 20 years of "hobbying". It's time to get serious about acoustics-the level of equipment we have is not to be fully realized until you address your room and resonances in your equipment.
The material Lugnut has stockpiled is called rigid insulation. It is fibreglass and is used for thermal and acoustic purposes. It is good stuff, comes in different thicknesses and densities. Another product I use is called duct liner. It is rigid fiberglass insulation with an acoustically transparent black surface that keeps the fiberglass fibers contained. it is used in air conditioning ducts for sound dampening. it is anti-microbal as well, as if that is important. You should be able to find any of this stuff in the yellow pages under insulation.
Experimentation is always the rule. Unless the room is very live acoustically you can easily overdo it, so proceed judiciously. Begin with a large thick floor rug centered around the listening area; may not want to cover the entire floor. Wood floors are beautiful & too much carpeting may make the room too dead anyway. Hook rugs / thick tapestry / deco blankets / your foam posters hung at strategic locations (walls directly behind speakers, first relections points etc.) work well. Diffusers or absorbtion on ceiling at reflection points are helpful (I sprayed my entire ceiling with 1" thick cellulose insulation fiber - the bleached white variety - works fantastic acoustically). Slap echo from the wall behind the listening position should be approached a bit more carefully, because too much there (as in a thick blanket) may absorb excessively. Experiment with thinner & smaller materials if too much absorbtion is noted. That compressed foam or tapestry might be ideal. More sophisticated devices include Argent Room Lenz, ASC Tube Traps, RPG diffusers, corner & triangular pillows, Room Tunes.
If you really want to do this right, consult with member Rives regarding professional approaches.
Audiogoon,

I like your handle by the way. I rather doubt what I'm describing is meant for foundations. This would be used commercially for perhaps meat locker walls. I've been carting around three boxes of the stuff for 20 years. I can find no product description on the outside of the boxes. It was pretty pricey stuff at the time I purchased it but came highly recommended. I bought my current home shortly after buying this product. My dedicated room is very nice acoustically so I haven't bothered to use anything. I'm sure that it could be improved upon and I've of late been contemplating doing this as an experiment. If anyone knows a scientific way to approach this I'd sure like to know.
The tapestry may help a little. Consider some framed, dense fiberglass (Owens Corning) covered with your choice of material. Colored burlap is the best choice. These fiberglass panels are 2' x 4' and available in 1" and 2" thicknesses.