The aerosol can is one of those everyday objects whose sound carries more weight than its on-screen appearance. That sharp psssh of pressure release is shorthand for graffiti tags, kitchen comedies, cleaning montages and TV ads. We recorded 50 variations close to the nozzle, capturing the metallic click, the surge of propellant, and the slow tail as the can empties. The whole library is free to download with no licence chase.
Short bursts cover punctuation work — a quick paint tag, a deodorant blast, a hairspray accent — while sustained holds run five to ten seconds for cooking sprays or insecticide foggers. You also get empties: the hollow rattle when the propellant is gone, plus the cough of compressed air at the end. Layer the sustains under dialogue for a kitchen scene, or pitch the hiss down an octave for a pneumatic-machine punch. Every file is a clean stem with no compression baked in.