Beautiful Vicoustic's flagship Wavewood panels for room tretment. Anyone?


Not in my room yet, but definitely the most beautiful acoustic treatment i’ve ever seen. Wavewood panel is made from a combination of acoustic foam and wood. Its instantly recognizable design results from unique research based on the acoustic properties of the wood and foam combined with non-linear sequential cavities that enable Wavewood to act as both an absorber and diffuser. The Expo Panel System consists of panels that are 3/4“ thick that are perforated following an optimal binary sequence that determines where holes are and where they are not. This scientifically proven approach eliminates the possibility of absorbing excessive high frequencies while preventing lobing effects that are common among many uniformly perforated surfaces. Damn, i need some of these in my white room!

Has anyone tried them? Normally room treatmentis so ugly, but those two solutions are just WOW

https://www.vicoustic.com/product/wavewood
http://rpgacoustic.com/acoustically-optimized-acoustic-wood-panels-offer-huge-benefits/
128x128chakster
Hey @slaw  
Yeah, gluing maybe not the best solution for people who wish to change the location of the pannels from time to time, but Vicoustic offering a frame now which can be used as alternative for some of the pannels.

I'm living in a white room surrounded by plants, i think i will glue them to the walls behind the speakers and behind my listening chair and i hope they will be there forever. 

I have checked stillpoints aperture and the price is insane (imo). One stillpoint pannel cost $749 and this is more than i paid for 10 vicoustic wavewood pannels including international shipping, they are quite big !     
Updates:

After receiving 10 x Wavewood panels i decided to go for a complete Room Analysis and was shocked how cheap this option is for Hi-Fi Listening Room. Believe it or not, but it was just $50 for my 33 m2 room. Some companies asking thousand dollars for room analysis, but anyone can upload all data on vicoustic website to get full analysis, i think it’s absolutely amazing! There is an option "project request", it took about 2 weeks to get 3D model of my room will all recommended products for the walls, ceiling etc. They even said the first correction is free. Analysis comes in PDF file, but with special app we can download actual 3D model of the room.

I want to recommend it to every audiophile, the price is nothing compared to what you will get. I really paid only $50 (hard to believe).

There are three main areas where acoustic treatment should act on:

1. Reverberation Time (RT);
2. Early Reflections;
3. Sound Field Anomalies (room modes, flutter echoes, etc.).

Highly recommended! No, i do not work for them :)

There is another guy on youtube who explained how he did that, it was very helpful for me. 
It will cost more for Home Cinema room etc, but for Listening Room it was almost free 
@chakster ,

Regarding the Stillpoints Aperatures… once you hear them in your space, you'll understand their value.
@slaw Relatively small Stillpoints panel is $800 each which is a typical High-End price tag for something that available 10 times cheaper from some other manufacturers specializing in acoustic treatment. Any panel for $800 is definitely not for me, sorry. I just don’t believe they can do any better than studio panels (absorbers or diffusers). A wooden frame with acoustic foam or fiberglass can not cost that much anyway. DIYers are happy to make them.

For my 33 square meters room i need about 70 panels of 5 different types according to the actual 3D analysis of my room made by Vicoustic engineers. Using acoustic panels without proper analysis of the actual room make no sense in my opinion. We gotta know where do we need acoustic tretement and why do we need them. They must be in the right place and must be effective.

And while the Stillpoints charge $800 per panes some other respected manufacturers charge $60 per panel (or $600 for 10 panels), i can see many of them, some looks great, some looks ugly.

Last night i’ve glued Vicoustic Wavewood panels on the wall using their Flexy Glue, this glue is removable like this without any damage. I watched these guys before i decided to buy mine, and it was pretty easy to glue the panels. I will continue next week.
I'm building a new listening room (new home) which has a limited size (interior-16'w X 19.5'l X 10'h). 

In my prior listening room which I had 39,000 LPs/78s on solid MDF shelving cabinets and on the floor and CDs in steel cabinets, with up to 11.5' high vaulted ceilings, multi-pane casement windows at first reflection and front wall, dual layers of drywall, etc.  Not a great sounding room with plenty of slap echo.  I treated the room with 2 pairs of Shakti Hallographs and 32 Synergistic Research HFTs.  The slap echo was ameliorated during music playing and sound frequency spikes were diminshed (greatly).  No problem with bass though.  This current room sounds better than 95% of the 100s of rooms I've heard at audio shows and audio salons.  

In the new listening only room (storage in an adjacent room), I'm building out the exterior walls with carbon filter absorption panels which are extensively built products unlike GIK cheap materials.  What looks like an interior room solution room is quadradic diffusion along the front and rear walls.  I doubt that the Stillpoints Aperture (I use only Stillpoints isolation products) would accomplish the same as these big, well built all wood products 
https://www.acousticfields.com/product/sounddiffuser-acousticdiffuser-qd13/   Yes, they are expensive, but once installed, don't have to be moved or augmented.  If I get to build my larger listening room, I would move them there.  The goal of the QD is to smooth the frequency distribution resulting in a room sounding twice as large as it actually is.  That's what I've been told.  Also, no more drywall on interior facing walls, only natural finished wood (plywood).  I anticipate that I will be able to duplicate my 40% current larger room with my smaller new room and add smoother mids and highs.  

The room acoustics is half the sound.  So many forums are concerned with small differences in sound for high priced equipment and tweaks.  I'm starting with the acoustics first.  I already have the equipment.