FELT RIGHT SOLUTIONS:

Noise from adjacent spaces

felt wall tiles

Reducing the sound coming from a noisy adjacent space is often a complex issue to address and may require a multi-pronged approach. Our customers have found that covering the entire wall with felt right tiles in order to dampen through-wall vibrations can be an effective part of the solution. Keep in mind it is also important to seal up air gaps between quiet and noisy spaces, as even tiny air gaps let in a lot of sound. Finally, if walls, floors, and ceilings are just too thin, you may consider renovation, adding mass (weight) to vibrating structures with the help of a licensed contractor.

Acoustic Considerations

Vibrating Structures (walls, doors, ceilings, floors)

Air Gaps (around doors, windows, etc)

Control of Noise Outside your Space

You Ask. We Answer

Acoustic Solutions

Seal the Gaps

Seal non-critical openings between noisy and quiet spaces. Use heavy draft stoppers for gaps under interior doors, add soft neoprene gaskets to door jambs and windows, use acoustic sealant for floor/ceiling cracks.

Add Damping Layer

Covering a wall with a vibration-damping layer such as Felt Right tiles can reduce sound transfer through the wall by converting sound vibrations into movement of the tiles.

ADD MASS

Hire a licensed contractor to add weight to vibration-transferring structures. Use MDF to box in exposed ducts or between exposed joists. Add a second layer of drywall to an existing wall. Replace hollow-core with solid-core doors.

CONTROL THE NOISY SPACE

Within the noisy space, move noise sources away from your quiet space, set loud machinery on vibration-isolating rubber pads, talk to neighbors about their habits, and enforce local noise ordinances when appropriate.

Placement For Your Space

When adding absorbers such as Felt Right acoustic tiles, consider these placement options.

1.

Cover an entire wall.

2.

Cover both sides of the offending wall.

You May Like These Felt Right Solutions

Felt Right wall tangent design in a cream color tangent line pattern displayed in living room behind a couch.

Latte Tangent Max

142.5 in x 71.5 in

$809.82
Shop Now
A room with a Felt Right color palette wall art, featuring shades of yellow, orange, red, and green, positioned above a white chair and a side table with a lamp.

Autumn Mosaic

55 in x 50.5 in

$159.68
Shop Now
Felt Right Quilting Star quilt design wall in light purple and grey displayed in a bedroom

Quilting Star

71 in x 71 in

$351.04
Shop Now
Dual Tone

Dual Tone

125 in x 66 in

$369.52
Shop Now
Pinstripe

Pinstripe

122 in x 48 in

$398.88
Shop Now
Metro

Metro

18 in x 18 in

$31.83
Shop Now
Buffalo Check

Buffalo Check

130.5 in x 59.5 in

$506.35
Shop Now
Stream

Stream

104 in x 133.5 in

$614.88
Shop Now
Lattice

Lattice

167 in x 24 in

$139.72
Shop Now
Cadence

Cadence

42 in x 71 in

$200.46
Shop Now
Gatsby

Gatsby

60 in x 60 in

$274.75
Shop Now
Revolution

Revolution

96 in x 48 in

$383.36
Shop Now
Santa Fe

Santa Fe

96 in x 72 in

$359.28
Shop Now
Chiaroscuro

Chiaroscuro

36 in x 71 in

$164.08
Shop Now
Felt Right wall art design using half circles in orange, yellow, blue, green, pink  on a wall next to a table and four chairs

Aurora Mirage

72 in x 48 in

$287.52
Shop Now
Rosebud

Rosebud

51 in x 69 in

$304.06
Shop Now
Scallop Max

Scallop Max

72 in x 60 in

$269.91
Shop Now
Ivory Tangent Max

Ivory Tangent Max

143 in x 119 in

$1,349.70
Shop Now
A Felt Right Wall Desgin in a Modern living room with a gray sectional sofa and abstract wall art in neutral shades (cream, grey, black)

Midtown

95 in x 53.5 in

$281.54
Shop Now
A Felt Right wall art design contemporary geometric-patterned artwork in blue green  hue with negative space, displayed above a gray sofa in a living room setting.

Mirage

72 in x 48 in

$287.52
Shop Now
Browse All Designs
Explore Felt Right Solutions

Sound Control For Your Space

This guide explains the science behind Felt Right acoustic tiles and provides practical advice on how to help solve acoustic problems using our sound dampening tiles and other methods. We’ll cover sound and acoustics basics, how to tell if your space is too noisy, noise control, and solutions for acoustically treating the following spaces and situations:
quality-of-sound-around-you

Offices (Home & Commercial)

Podcast / Video / Recording Studios

Conference Rooms

Video / Phone Conversations

Living Rooms

Noise from Adjacent Spaces

Installation FAQs