4-panel layout
First, control the first reflections.
A basic starting point for a small listening workstation: panels go where side-wall reflections return to the listener the fastest.
Starter layouts
See how the treatment scope changes as you move from a basic acoustic panel and first-reflection absorber to a fuller layout with low-frequency control.
This is a practical starting map: where work usually begins with side walls, ceiling, the area behind monitors and room corners.
Interactive preview
Choose a full-range layout or a variant with bass traps. The viewer shows placement logic and the order of system expansion.
4-panel layout
A basic starting point for a small listening workstation: panels go where side-wall reflections return to the listener the fastest.
Drag with a mouse or finger to view the layout from the side, front and top. The walls are transparent so the panel positions are visible.
Ready sets
Basic is an economical start in 4 colours. Pro and Pro + Bass use the full Inari palette so broadband panels and bass traps stay materially consistent.
Basic sets
A good choice if the client wants to start by controlling reflections and reverb without moving into the premium line.
For a small monitor workstation where calming side reflections is the priority.
The most common sensible start for a home studio: more front control and a clearer listening position.
Pro / Pro + Bass sets
This is the right direction for studios, control rooms and clients who want consistent fabric across Pro panels and bass traps.
A Pro variant for a workstation where premium fabric, aesthetics and higher monitoring predictability matter more.
For a more demanding workstation where higher monitoring precision and predictability matter.
A variant for a room where excessive low-frequency energy becomes a problem in addition to reflections.
A strong starter set for more critical work: broadband control plus front/rear corners.
Controlling first-reflection points on side walls helps stabilize the stereo image and reduce chaos in the first listening impression.
Adding panels behind the monitors helps reduce energy reflected from the front wall and improves midrange clarity.
An 8-panel layout extends control to the ceiling and rear of the room. It is a good direction for a more predictable workstation.
Two bass traps in the front corners complement broadband panels where the room builds up low-frequency energy.
Four bass traps in the corners are a direction for more demanding workstations where the low range must be controlled as well as reflections.
Choose a panel line
Core is the most common starting point. Choose Core Pro when higher monitoring precision matters. Core Bass complements the layout where the low range is the problem.
For controlling first reflections, shortening reverb and improving monitoring clarity.
For control rooms, listening rooms and situations where stereo stability matters more.
To complement the layout where excessive low-frequency energy is a problem in addition to reflections.