
Lots of walks and chews that take a while to demolish, and try your best to keep calm and quiet yourself. I know how hard it is - yesterday I sent a foster off to a new home who's been here for a fortnight, she couldn't go in with my own dogs at all and my collie was barking every time I so much as touched the kitchen door for a while, and if I got away with that, she was barking once I'd shut it having gone in with the foster, and again when I touched the back door from inside the kitchen... it's just been a nightmare and yes, I've lost my cool with her numerous times and ended up shouting. It simply does not work - it stops her at the time but then she starts again soon after, because my shouting hasn't made any difference to her reaction to the trigger itself. What does work is me setting things up so I can clicker train calm behaviour around me opening/touching doors, and also managing things if I can to reduce it (e.g. she barks MUCH more if she's upstairs at the time but if she's in the hallway looking, will bark much less and I have a much better chance of keeping her calm and stopping it happening).
Problem with your situation as Bellamia has already said is that it's totally new and stressful for your dogs - they will naturally be more reactive. Distraction is going to be your best bet with the noises I think, if you can't pin down specifics (so you could do a quick bit of this noise = yummy treat with them) - train a positive interrupter so you can distract them easily, it only takes a minute to do, then you can just make a noise quickly and it'll take their mind off whatever they're barking at. I'd do the same with your friend's dogs too, so that if you interrupt yours, then the others aren't going to set them off again. Vid here for that:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBvPaqMZyo8