Waveforms
What Are Waveforms?
Waveforms are the visual and mathematical shapes of the signals your oscillator spits out. Each waveform has a unique harmonic profile that gives it its tone – from pure and simple to rich and gnarly.
In synthesis, choosing a waveform is one of your first sound design decisions. The waveform determines how bright, buzzy, hollow, or soft the sound will be – and how it’ll behave when filtered, modulated, or layered.
Common Waveforms
- Sine: Smooth and pure. No harmonics, great for bass or subtle modulation.
- Triangle: Mellow and soft. Some harmonics, but still gentle on the ears.
- Square / Pulse: Hollow and rich in odd harmonics. Great for chiptunes, reedy tones, or PWM action.
- Sawtooth: Bright and aggressive. Packed with harmonics – perfect for basslines and leads.
- Noise (White / Pink): Not technically a waveform, but useful for percussive sounds and textures.
- Complex / Digital Shapes: Wavetables, folding, FM, phase distortion – all lead to more expressive sound shapes.
Why It Matters
The waveform you start with sets the vibe. A sine into a filter is chill. A saw into that same filter is probably yelling at you. Stack and detune two saws? Instant classic supersaw. Sync or modulate a square? Wild territory.
Waveforms are the character of your tone – everything else just shapes it.