![]() I tried to work around it and make it sort of a fantasy donut by adding. I have looked up other tutorials, or looked at solutions for similar problems, but nothing has helped. ![]() ![]() The sprinkles clipping through the icing, and being on the other side of the icing as well really bugs me. It’s like one step at a time and now I have dropped my expectations and now when I see results they are beyond my expectations I get more enthusiastic and if I get stuck at some point I ask around and if I don’t get answers then I just move on believing that it will come by one day that is bcz maybe I am not that experienced yet… sometimes yes u get discouraged but then folks like u guys help pick me up again and keep moving and as you have said just hang in there and Do Not Give up so that’s what I am doing. I am doing the Blender Guru tutorial and am only on part 10. Well I am a filmmaker and hv been doing it for past 8 years and I have failed at it so many times that I can’t even count I first struggled with Photoshop then with color grading and then with AE and after dumping Photoshop for years cause I was too ambitious (which I am even today ) and wasn’t realistic cause I was comparing myself with experts so I came in blender I came with the expectation that I am going to fail but if I hang in there I will get good at it. A year later I released The Wow Factor (an eBook on using the Compositor), and made enough money in its opening month of sales to quit my daytime job and do Blender Guru fulltime. The best thing to do is just to go at it, do what seems most fun to you, and not give up.įirst thank you so much for taking the time out to give such a wonderful advice I could run Blender Guru fulltime by selling training products. Though in the end, what worked for me may not be the best process for you. They’ll tell you how to do something, but that deeper level, the why of something, that is best found through tons and tons of goofing around, experimenting with your various tools, nodes, and settings to see what you can produce. Now here I am, comfortably intermediate, and getting better all the while.Īnd what Hunkadoodle said is very much true: following tutorials will only get you so far. Instead of creating grand vistas that wouldn’t look out of place in a Lord of the Rings movie, I found a shot of a little low poly house I liked, copied it, added my own touches to it, then moved on to a slightly more complicated scene. GitHub - csalmeida/blender-guru-donut: 3D model of a donut created with Blender. It wasn’t until I started doing things in more managable chunks that I started truly improving. 3D model of a donut created with Blender. I’d get burnt out, drop it for a year or so, pick it up again with the same expectations, get burnt out again, rinse and repeat. When I started out, I went into it expecting to CREATE WORLDS OF ABSOLUTE MAJESTY THE LIKES OF WHICH NO ONE HAS EVER SEEN, and, well, I ended up falling far short of that. Think of it as being an iterative process. It won’t win you any awards, but it’ll give you a basic understanding of what you need to do to make something that looks a little cooler next time. Make some little block cars with octogonal wheels driving around on a little road. I'm now in the privileged position of turn down job prospects so that I can continue making tutorials for Blender Guru.You can still do that, just don’t expect to make something worthy of The Fast and the Furious right away. ![]() I could run Blender Guru fulltime by selling training products.Ī year later I released The Wow Factor (an eBook on using the Compositor), and made enough money in it's opening month of sales to quit my daytime job and do Blender Guru fulltime. People actually liked my work and my tutorials? And they wanted to pay me to write something about Blender?! ![]() Most striking of all, some where asking if I'd write a book! So I created - a site that would make tutorials, with the goal of using it to attract freelance work. But after a year of making tutorials, I still had none. I was lost and very seriously considered giving it up.īut when I attended the 2009 Blender conference, I was shocked to discover that people actually knew of me and loved my tutorials. I wonder if Blender Artists could also do a community type NFT thing to also help fund Blender development. I knew that I wanted to do 3D fulltime, but nobody was going to hire me with my sucky portfolio. Blender guru is asking for thousands of donut blend files to make one massive collage image and sell it as an NFT if it reaches those crazy prices that other Digital Art NFTs have made recently then it will be fantastic for Blenders Development. Project Information Blender: Donut (Blender Guru - Instructions). This was usually because I was day dreaming about making something cool in Blender :P In worked as a labourer on construction sites, but I was fired twice for not being "switched on". When I finished high school I had no serious job prospects. ![]()
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