I have a very crude bedroom recording studio set up for recording my audio-description voiceover.
At the moment i have duvets messily propped up on the walls around my desk and I put pillows on conspicuous desk surfaces to try and improve the room sound.
My desk is up against a wall, so the nearest large reflective surfaces are the walls behind my desk (so, immediately behind my monitor screen) and to either side of my desk. Behind me is a bit of space (my bed, and then the far wall).
My duvet mess somehow helps create pretty reasonable sounding recordings, but recently I've come by a load of acoustic foam panels. (Ripped from a recording booth at an office where I used to record before lockdown fun).
Here's a pic. Silly set up!


https://imgur.com/a/dtfffzZ
I just want to get an idea of good placement for the panels.
I have lots of them so I could cover all the immediate surrounding walls if need be, but I've read that complete coverage might not actually have a good effect on the sound.
I've read about using a mirror to work out bad reflection points, but this always seems to relate to a mixing/monitoring context (looking for the monitors in the reflection) rather than vocal recording.
So where do you think I should be putting my acoustic panels?
Or maybe actually all the walls immediately around me should be covered after all?
What do you think?
Thanks