![]() Head into Settings > Sound > Ringtone on your iPhone, and you should find your custom ringtone(s) listed with the defaults. Now all that remains to be done is to set your new ringtone on your iPhone. Now go to the Tones section in iTunes and check the box next to the new ringtone file, followed by Done. Select the Ringtone app, locate your created ringtone file under the adjacent Ringtone Documents section, and either Save To or drag it onto your desktop.ĭouble click on the ringtone file from your desktop to set it playing in iTunes. Select your device and click on Apps, then scroll down to the File Sharing section. To do that you’ll need to plug your iPhone into your computer and bring up iTunes. Now it’s time to get that ringtone installed as, well, a ringtone. It’ll now be saved on your phone under the My Tones tab at the bottom of the screen. Remember that this sample will be looping, so consider ticking the ‘Fade Out’ and maybe even the ‘Fade In’ box to smooth the transitions. Hit the save button (the white one to the right of the Play button) and name your ringtone. ![]() Keep in mind that you can vary the size of the sample within the parameters you set (30 or 20 seconds) before. Hit play to start the ringtone sample playing, and shift the start and end points to suit. You’ll see the track laid out as a wave, represented by start and end points. Whether or not it sounds good is really up to you and your musical abilities, for me personally, I’m not musically gifted at all, so my home made ringtones sound like a cat walking across a piano, but the result is certainly unique if not necessarily pleasant.Open up Ringtone Maker and tap to select a song, agreeing to grant the necessary access to your media files when prompted. Navigate to the track you want using the self-explanatory Select Music interface.Ĭhoose the length of your tone – ‘Ringtone’ is 30 seconds, ‘Text Tone’ is 20 seconds. You’ll probably want to be somewhat musically inclined for this to be a good option for your iPhone ringtone generation. Garageband can also tap into the microphone of the iPhone if you want to record a custom voice message as well, though the trick of turning a Voice Recording from the dedicated app into a ringtone works as well if you made a voice note at some point that you’d prefer to use instead. Remember you can change ringtones and text tones at any point, so if you want to later assign the ringtone to a specific contact or as a text tone, you can quickly do that through iOS Settings or the Contacts app on your iPhone. When finished, exit out of Garageband as usual and enjoy your newly created ringtone or text tone.Assign to Contact – this assigns the ringtone specifically to a designated contact in your address book only playing when that individual contacts you.Standard Text Tone – this assigns the ringtone as the new default text tone for all incoming text messages and iMessages.Standard Ringtone – this assigns the ringtone as your new default ringtone for all incoming calls.Choose one of three options depending on what you want to do with the newly created ringtone:.Name the ringtone whatever you would like and assign the artist name, song name, etc (this is basically the metadata for the Garageband song, which will be embedded in the ringtone) then tap on “Export”.Choose “Ringtone” from the sharing options GarageBand templates are like having a personal assistant (or apprentice) prep the recording studio/music workshop for you before you.Select the song you just created and choose the Sharing icon in the corner, it looks like a box with an arrow pointing out of it. ![]()
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