
Your ability to see what looks goods will advance more quickly than your ability to actually do it. (If you are tempted to whip out your mobile phone right now, STOP, go and look up how to do screen shots eh?) Post a screenshot and include the whole Blender window - a picture speaks a thousand words.

Tell us what you are doing, what you expected to happen, what did happen, what you did to try and fix it. No one minds helping those who are making an effort. Don't think about "making a project" that brings all kinds of expectations with it you don't need. Spend a part of your allocated daily time with blender just messing about with what you know so far. These are learning exercise, sketches, not finished masterpieces, don't get stuck obsessing over it at this stage as repetition of the basics is key and you won't get to do that by spending hours obsessing over one settings. Give each one your best shot, and move on. This is what forces you to not just get stuck with the tutorials. Instead of a donut, make a cupcake or something. Similar in that you don't need tools you haven't learned yet, but not the same so you have to start making your own choices.

This is the challenge, how much can you remember? Makes notes on the bits that didn't stick the first time that you have to look up. This is the the monkey-see-monkey-do phase. Make notes as you go, particularly of hot keys. Even if they don't teach you the specific thing you want, after doing the beginners tutorials you will at least have a feel for the program, understand the basic navigation controls and have the vocabulary to ask the right questions. Not only will this save you a great deal of time and frustration, but probably from rage quitting as well.

Sheep it A free render farm through distributed computingīlender Stack Exchange for technical help with Blenderīlend4Web to export your blend to the webīlender Discord for live chats with other Blender usersĬC0 textures and additional contents and services to support - €9.90 / monthĭo beginners tutorials.

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