6 Blender Tips from a Decade of Experience – I Need Your Feedback!
Added 2024-11-18 13:03:19 +0000 UTCHey Patrons,
I’m working on my next video, where I’ll be sharing 6 hard-earned lessons I’ve learned over my 10 years using Blender.
I’ve outlined some bullet points for each tip to explain what I mean, and I’d love to get your feedback. Do these tips feel valuable? Would you like more detail or clarification on any of them?
These are still a work in progress, so I might adjust or even swap out tips entirely based on your input.
Thanks so much for your support and insights! 😊
1. You Don’t Need to Render in 4K
Higher resolution doesn’t always mean better renders—can highlight flaws in textures and models.
Professional VFX often uses 2K or 2.5K renders, even for 4K projects.
CGI often needs blurring (motion blur, depth of field) to blend with live-action footage.
Focus on lighting, composition, and detail instead of raw resolution.
2. You Don’t Need Complexity for Great Results
Simplicity often works better than overly complex setups.
Most of my materials, lighting setups, and nodes are simple.
Artistic skills (composition, framing, lighting) matter more than technical tricks.
Complex setups have their place, but they’re not always necessary.
3. Embrace Iterations Instead of Expecting Instant Results
Even professionals start with rough renders and improve step by step.
Iteration: fix one issue at a time, refine gradually.
Time and feedback loops are essential for quality.
Don’t stress over ugly first drafts; they’re part of the process.
4. Your Hardware Isn’t as Important as You Think
Better hardware helps, but it doesn’t solve everything.
You’ll always face limitations—learn to optimize and work efficiently.
Tricks like reducing texture sizes and faking effects save time and resources.
Constraints push you to be creative and resourceful.
5. Get Excited About What You Want to Do in 3D—Don’t Just Follow Tutorials
Tutorials are great, but passion projects keep you motivated long-term.
Find a goal that excites you—something you want to create.
Use tutorials as tools to achieve your vision, not the focus of your learning.
Personal projects make learning fun and rewarding.
6. Don’t Use PBR Textures—Try Image Textures
PBR textures are resource-heavy and can overcomplicate workflows.
Large scenes with many PBR textures can bog down performance.
Simple image textures can achieve great results, especially for backgrounds.
Use photos for base color, tweak them for roughness or bump maps.
Save PBR textures for hero objects that need close-up detail.
Comments
Great tips ! Thank you for that !
Pier-Olivier Martel
2024-11-18 21:43:52 +0000 UTC