Here's a tip for you: if you create an object and then accidentally click away from it, you can select it again and press F9 and it will bring back the options of that object on the bottom left
"I'm a big fan of saving time" - proceeds to watch every blender tutorial on the internet in order to make an hour-long video on tips. thank you for the dedication, my friend.
49:34 Symmetrize is extremely useful for armatures in rigging, name bones on right side with .R suffix and then it'll create the left side but name it .L etc.
9:39, don't worry, we all know about proportional editing, cause we have all accidentally turned it on at some point after which we didn't know how to turn it off anymore
I've been using Blender for years now and still there are some tricks in this video that I didn't know. I am constantly using the 'select linked' tool, but my mind just got blown away that you can limit your selection by seams. When I needed somthing similar in the past I went through the process of creating groups. I already loved Blender because it does a way better job at UV unwrapping and has more and better tools for that job than 3DsMax or Maya, but now this will take my texturing workflow to a whole new level! I feel a bit embarrassed for not knowing this, but I just wanted to drop by and say THANK YOU so much for sharing this - you potentially saved me hundreds or even thousands of hours in the future!
wow, i sing praises of the kind souls of those who create youtube tutorials all the time, but you've truly gone and did the damn thing. my learning style is watch a video and harvest a few tips here and there, this is great! and the freakin timestamps too? my man!
grey keith Bro... Thank you so much! I’ll do my best to one up myself sometime soon. Just wait until the next video(; after that I’ll need to calm down for maybe a little
Daniel, you are such a dude for doing this. It bewilders me that some people have disliked this video. Honestly, what amazing effort you've put in to this. You're an excellent example of the type of people the Blender community has in it. I've liked and subscribed. Well done.
I will have to watch this 100 times to be able to memorize everything. Best video on Blender I could have possibly come across at this point in time. Been doing Blender for 1-2 hours every day since december 2019.
This video should be named "101 Blender tips". The first one should be "1: Watch this video!" And that would be a damn good advice. 😁 Great compilation btw!
one of the greatest vids i've seen about blender. Just a starter but i will definetly recommend you dude. For all things i kinda liked or thought that they will help me in future, i put those into one blender file with some text to remind me about the use,application and keys. Big Shout out dude! Great work you've done with this Vid!
Great tips, learned a few I did not know about! Thanks... Addition to your tips, for making a cube into a sphere if you apply a cast to it you will turn it into an actual sphere. Take a side look at the cube after the subdiv and you will notice its not perfectly round but if you apply a cast to it you can correct that. Another addition to your tips: When sliding a vertex along an edge, if you hold Alt you can slide past any outer vertex. If you do it on an end vert do the double GG, slide it along the edge and then click and hold alt to move it past its origin into previously empty space to extend it out.
Man, I've been all over the internet a hundred times over going through tutorials, this one is hands down the most helpful, I consider myself intermediate and I noted several very helpful points. So if you're a beginner, this IS THE video you need to keep. Great dedication and delivery my friend. And you had me rollin' when you were animating suzanne's eyes lmao! Great work man. 20/10
Mate you are the greatest! Seriously. Have learnt so much from you already these past few days. I’ve been going through one by one. I intend to practice certain areas daily. It’s even inspired me to create a project I’ve called playground. I’ve made plains for floors to separate areas where I can play around and practice. Got ones for Vert/edge/face bevelling. Material shading. Extruding. Knife cutting/bisecting. Selection practice (loops plus the million other options for selecting) etc etc. Lit the entire area, with separate camera and lighting for each area too. So thanks for the inspiration, entertainment and for your immense efforts to share your talents and knowledge. I could kiss you 😘
Good job man. So much to learn when working in 3d it is very easy to miss or overlook simple, impressive and time saving tools, options and shortcuts. Well done. Also, how amazing is Blender now?!!! Unbelievable
Alt+S is an amazing tool for organic modeling. I use it a lot. For example, if you want to tweak a normal map baking cage! Press Alt+S on the duplicate mesh and you got a smooth topology that doesn't intersect with the high poly (well... most of the time) :D Amazing video! I knew a bunch of those as well. Actually started using the bool tool in combination of sculpting tools (dynotopo changed my whole sculpting workflow). Timelapses sometimes are real treasures. I started using Blender in 2012 in my free time and now it's one of my favorite tools out there. Wouldn't ever change that. Blender is free and lets you be creative freely. Recording at 1 AM? Well... I had to snort at the eyes, too^^ The time put in those is worth it. Real diamonds in there. Thanks for the video. Subbed instantly.
I've been using Blender for years now, which means that I already know a lot of things on this program, even if it was for hobby purposes. I'm always impressed to see how many unknown features it can hide. You've been talking about some of these as "life savers", but you are the life saver here in my opinion. Thank you for taking the time to make this kind of video !
This is incredible! Knew most of them already, but for people just getting their feet wet, this is an absolute must watch. Watched it all and saved for future, oh and subbed for sure
I LITERALLY dramatically gasped out loud when you got up to connecting verts with J. I moved to Blender from 3ds max and have been using it for over a year for work, and this entire time I have been DESPERATE for a simple connect verts function that doesn't involve the knife tool. You have changed my ENTIRE world with that one tip alone.
Great video. Enjoyed the hell out of it. Ive been using blender for years. Blender is such a powerful tool now. I knew most of these things but even experienced people can learn more. Thanks for the video
just wanted to say that in my opinon this is th bst tutorial out there, no bull shit, just straight to th oint hlpful tips one after the other. I will be watching this a lot of times. Thank you!!
A few months back I've been struggling to find anything that could help me use Blender and be able to work with people using expensive CAD softwares that aren't available for students (unable to save project file, unable to open project file made initially in the fully-licensed version of let's say ArchiCad), 16:37 this is what I was looking for and I'm so grateful to you for this information, and everything else, subscribed. Going to share this video with everyone I know who use Blender.
#20 8:07 More that can be done. After making a selection I used shift-click to de-select one point. Then by using numpad+ and numpad- I was able to add or delete points based on this new location. Thanks Daniel for making this video.
Thank you @Daniel Krafft for taking insane action and saving us all beginners a few months of time in research and learning!! With @Patrick Wilson 's table of contents this has become a daily go-to video! Cannot appreciate this enough. Thanks a ton!!!
For #11 at 04:42 you also need to add a "Cast" modifier, set it to Sphere, and factor 1. Even with 6 levels of subdivision, a cube will not be spherical! It will have parts that stick outside a UV sphere of the same size.
Cool! Not seen the whole video yet, but: #2: This can be done even faster/simpler: Just select the objects, and Alt+Click on any parameter you want to adjust. That's it - the change will be made to all of the selected objects.
Thank you for this video! I have learned a TON just by watching and taking note of the things I can understand at my level. I'm setting myself a calendar reminder to revisit this video once a month to see what else I can learn. Your last tip - avoid being perfectionist - was also very valuable as that has been a big hurdle to get a grasp of Blender's breathtaking capabilities.
thanks for sharing! in my first month of using a 3D software, i have surprisingly discovered most of these tips! it was an amazing journey and it's a fun addictive software. just sad i just discovered my passion for 3D at 37 lol.
Just started learning Blender and have already watched many tutorials. But this video stands out and is incredibly insightful and amazing. The pacing is spot on. Well done and THANKS! Oh and I don't understand the hate for the pop audio transition. I found it useful as it clearly indicates when you're starting a new tip. Without it, the tips may blend together a little too much. Clear separation is good.
Thanks so much! I got like, a lot of comments hating on the pop sound so I removed it in my latest video.. Maybe they are the outspoken minority? I'll do a poll on this soon. Thanks again
@@bedbathandblender1168 Developments in Blender, have nothing to do with police brutality and a pandemic. I actually see this as much needed reform so the rest of this decade can be amazing. please, go somewhere else
amazing tutorial, i had to stop every 10 minutes or so to digest everything cause i love this software and want to enjoy my time with it, the second to last tip was one of my favorites, i just rendered and edited a video on blender today and just sharing with people made my day i didn't even mind effing up an alpha over channel that happened when i made a meta strip
Symmetrize, #92, is useful for armatures. If you put .r at the end of the name of your bones then symmetrize them, it will mirror them and also change the names correctly to .l and vice versa. I'm pretty sure this helps with flipping poses and stuff like that.
@@DanielKrafft It is indeed way better than the standard denoiser, you've got to check it out! make sure to enable denoising data under render passes and plug in the denoising Normal/abledo in the compositor whilst using the node for the best results. It's awesome.
@@batwithahat312 Actually if you use it properly it decreases render time by a large amount. First you lower your samples. Normally in blender you use high sample counts to have less noise and cleaner image. But if you lower your samples to a much smaller number, you'll get a messy image covered in noise but the denoiser only does 1 pass so really compared to high sample images it's much faster.
Symmetrize is used over mirror in situations where naming conventions come into play. For example, an armature, naming each bone down one side of the skeleton ending with _l or _r will automatically rename the symmertrized bone to the opposite side 😁
Almost all of this is way over my head as I'm a total beginner, on day 3, but I find watching stuff like this very handy when getting into new things. It paints a picture of whats possible and when I have an issue I have the mental framework of whats possible to solve it... even if I can't do it off the top off my head :)
My. Guy. Turn that bell on you're gonna be pretty glad you subscribed in a few days. I'm feeling so grateful right now this has made me so humbled and glad.
Out of all the videos I have seen on blender this is by far the best one! Thank you so much for taking the time to explain things very well! I learned alot more from this video! Kudos!
Thank you for this!! Extra tip to add to#23 8:42 Quick Eyedropper: You can also hover over the "Focus Distance" box under Camera > Depth Of Field, press “e” on the keyboard, and then click anywhere in your scene to get the distance for that point. I find this more helpful than the "Focus on Object" eyedropper :)
Daniel Krafft - Oops, edited my comment to add in the bit about pressing “e” while hovering :)) Actually, it was only from your video that I learned the “e” stands for eyedropper! Now it makes sense.
@Anwar El-Omari You've got it wrong). Imagine a soccer player scoring a beautiful goal, a boxer striking a precise shot, an archer hitting the middle of a target. It's all beautiful and praiseworthy. Likewise, the author has beautiful things that evokes a sense of beauty. I'm sure his voice could be that of the best movie characters in the movies!
Hmmm... I am thinking this tip would be awesome for EXPERIMENTING with different editing options. Then later pick the one you like best. You could use the time line to store various edits before deciding on the best one.
Hey, if you format the timestamps like this: 0:00 Beginning 0:20 Tip #1: Drag & Drop Materials etc etc and drop it in your description, TH-cam will automatically split your video's timeline into chapters! This video is incredible, by the way. I may be suggesting this selfishly so I can use the chapters to find the tips for reference. Awesome job!
Jeese, Design School Online, you've put so much time and effort into making this video. Very useful stuff, especially for newcomers to Blender. Thanks.
my kind of video. great work
Thanks man. Pretty sure I can rap godzilla faster btw (;
@@kushalchahal2480geez dude, I like his videos, I'm gonna do a project with vfx tracking.
yeah they are cool and interesting not booring
What a video! no unnecessary rambling, no annoying plugging, just pure, wonderful, content. Hats off to you for giving this to us!
Here's a tip for you: if you create an object and then accidentally click away from it, you can select it again and press F9 and it will bring back the options of that object on the bottom left
Thanks so much for that tip! Will check it out
Dude, thank you, thank you so much - you just extended my lifespan by reducing the ANGER this created each time it happened...
Genius !
Your comment is the most valuable I found in this easter season 😂💯🤩
I never knew this. Thank you!
"I'm a big fan of saving time" - proceeds to watch every blender tutorial on the internet in order to make an hour-long video on tips.
thank you for the dedication, my friend.
it'l take me weeks to rember all this even though I already knew a few
49:34 Symmetrize is extremely useful for armatures in rigging, name bones on right side with .R suffix and then it'll create the left side but name it .L etc.
Me seeing this as a beginner: *This will make a fine addition to my collection*
Lol. Glad I could help
Me seeing this as a 10 year veteran: "Pffft, I bet i know all of thes....WELL I'LL BE DANGED!"
Then i see another of it
Did the same 😂 Learning it as a quarantine challenge?
Hello there.
9:39, don't worry, we all know about proportional editing, cause we have all accidentally turned it on at some point after which we didn't know how to turn it off anymore
Lol
it's TRUE!!! ;D
Dude, Exactly. That is exactly freaking right
I've been using Blender for years now and still there are some tricks in this video that I didn't know. I am constantly using the 'select linked' tool, but my mind just got blown away that you can limit your selection by seams. When I needed somthing similar in the past I went through the process of creating groups. I already loved Blender because it does a way better job at UV unwrapping and has more and better tools for that job than 3DsMax or Maya, but now this will take my texturing workflow to a whole new level! I feel a bit embarrassed for not knowing this, but I just wanted to drop by and say THANK YOU so much for sharing this - you potentially saved me hundreds or even thousands of hours in the future!
Wow! I’m really glad to have helped (: Thanks for letting me know!!
I've gone back to this video so many times just trying to rememer one small thing and every time I end up watching the entire thing
wow, i sing praises of the kind souls of those who create youtube tutorials all the time, but you've truly gone and did the damn thing. my learning style is watch a video and harvest a few tips here and there, this is great! and the freakin timestamps too? my man!
grey keith Bro... Thank you so much! I’ll do my best to one up myself sometime soon. Just wait until the next video(; after that I’ll need to calm down for maybe a little
Daniel, you are such a dude for doing this. It bewilders me that some people have disliked this video. Honestly, what amazing effort you've put in to this. You're an excellent example of the type of people the Blender community has in it. I've liked and subscribed. Well done.
Thanks so much mat I’m really glad that you found it helpful
Dislikes? Never heard of em!
Huge work! great, thanks for this
This is by far the best video on the site. It helps so much!!! Ty
I will have to watch this 100 times to be able to memorize everything. Best video on Blender I could have possibly come across at this point in time. Been doing Blender for 1-2 hours every day since december 2019.
Nice! Thanks man
Who the hell is giving this a dislike? This is a huge amount of work. I'm sure this took weeks to put together. Thank you for all the effort!
I think some people didn't like the pop noise. Kind of a surface level thing but yeah I guess. I appreciate your support! Thank you (:
ikr
@@DanielKrafft I think it's just the bots.
This video should be named "101 Blender tips". The first one should be "1: Watch this video!"
And that would be a damn good advice. 😁
Great compilation btw!
Aw thanks! That means a lot! Thank you for your support (:
or 101 blenderians tips^^
This is one of the most high effort videos I've ever seen on TH-cam, Good shit man!
Thanks man. Anytime
one of the greatest vids i've seen about blender. Just a starter but i will definetly recommend you dude. For all things i kinda liked or thought that they will help me in future, i put those into one blender file with some text to remind me about the use,application and keys. Big Shout out dude! Great work you've done with this Vid!
This dudes a life saver ive been trying to find "J to Connect Vertices" for days just to fix this one problem thank you for this i needed this so much
Glad to help!! And I'm also glad that one specifically was a life saver. Stay healthy!
0:55 "This is my cube. There are many like it, but this one is mine."
Piotr Mikielewicz I understand brother. That tip was for the uncultured, but a tip it was, and told it must be.
Lot o' good that Soldier trainin' did ya! :D
CPI TANKER This is the way
@@DanielKrafft This is the way
Gee I am crying, good one !
Great tips, learned a few I did not know about! Thanks...
Addition to your tips, for making a cube into a sphere if you apply a cast to it you will turn it into an actual sphere. Take a side look at the cube after the subdiv and you will notice its not perfectly round but if you apply a cast to it you can correct that.
Another addition to your tips: When sliding a vertex along an edge, if you hold Alt you can slide past any outer vertex. If you do it on an end vert do the double GG, slide it along the edge and then click and hold alt to move it past its origin into previously empty space to extend it out.
Thanks for all the tips (: I appreciate it
1:06
Me: [deletes default cube, adds in new one, saves as startup]
Big brain
You and I think alike!
This is me😂😂
is it still a default cube then?
@@youtekgdkwjmr6387 your default cube
I absolutely adore how the tips are great, and the sales pitches are terrible. It's the perfect level of charm for a video as long as this one.
Thanks mate! I appreciate the support a lot
One of the best and most useful tips and tricks videos I´ve ever seen for Blender!
Wow! Thanks!
Man, I've been all over the internet a hundred times over going through tutorials, this one is hands down the most helpful, I consider myself intermediate and I noted several very helpful points. So if you're a beginner, this IS THE video you need to keep. Great dedication and delivery my friend. And you had me rollin' when you were animating suzanne's eyes lmao! Great work man. 20/10
Man I appreciate this comment. I'm glad you learned a lot from the video! You'd probably like the 150 tips video too in case you haven't seen it
@@DanielKrafft I haven't seen it, but now that I'm aware of it I'm about to check it out, thanks for the heads up!
This is your daily dose of Recommendation
100 tip in an hour
Very appreciated
Joel Robert Justiawan Thank you Joel!
@@DanielKrafft np. Very useful. Thancc.
Cool and good
Ty joel
@@moralesabjf984 np
Straight to the point, perfect pace, slight humour and loads of information. This is amazing! keep up the good work! :)
Thanks bro! Appreciate the support (:
Im three years late, but I thank you for this video, truly one of the best youtubers on this platform. 🙏@@DanielKrafft
This is absolute Gold. You are a God.
Mate you are the greatest! Seriously. Have learnt so much from you already these past few days.
I’ve been going through one by one. I intend to practice certain areas daily. It’s even inspired me to create a project I’ve called playground. I’ve made plains for floors to separate areas where I can play around and practice. Got ones for Vert/edge/face bevelling. Material shading. Extruding. Knife cutting/bisecting. Selection practice (loops plus the million other options for selecting) etc etc. Lit the entire area, with separate camera and lighting for each area too.
So thanks for the inspiration, entertainment and for your immense efforts to share your talents and knowledge. I could kiss you 😘
6:15 beveling a vertex. You sir just woke me up from my 2 years of sleep.
(: Glad to hear it
Good job man.
So much to learn when working in 3d it is very easy to miss or overlook simple, impressive and time saving tools, options and shortcuts.
Well done.
Also, how amazing is Blender now?!!! Unbelievable
It’s crazy awesome how blender is free. Glad you enjoyed the video
Alt+S is an amazing tool for organic modeling. I use it a lot. For example, if you want to tweak a normal map baking cage! Press Alt+S on the duplicate mesh and you got a smooth topology that doesn't intersect with the high poly (well... most of the time) :D
Amazing video! I knew a bunch of those as well. Actually started using the bool tool in combination of sculpting tools (dynotopo changed my whole sculpting workflow). Timelapses sometimes are real treasures. I started using Blender in 2012 in my free time and now it's one of my favorite tools out there. Wouldn't ever change that. Blender is free and lets you be creative freely.
Recording at 1 AM? Well... I had to snort at the eyes, too^^ The time put in those is worth it. Real diamonds in there. Thanks for the video. Subbed instantly.
This comment made me smile. Thank you for the kind words!
Amazing. The complexity of software like 3ds max, Blender, Maya, etc. never cease to baffle me. Can use a lifetime to learn them properly.
Wow! thanks a lot. This will help me a lot from trial and error. You saved my time.
Glad to help out
I've been using Blender for years now, which means that I already know a lot of things on this program, even if it was for hobby purposes. I'm always impressed to see how many unknown features it can hide.
You've been talking about some of these as "life savers", but you are the life saver here in my opinion. Thank you for taking the time to make this kind of video !
Aw thanks! That means a lot!
This is incredible! Knew most of them already, but for people just getting their feet wet, this is an absolute must watch. Watched it all and saved for future, oh and subbed for sure
Thanks Kimi! Much appreciated (: Comments like these make my week
My favourites:
1:25
4:16
6:28
10:33
12:55
19:23
19:53
22:07
24:10
26:20
I LITERALLY dramatically gasped out loud when you got up to connecting verts with J. I moved to Blender from 3ds max and have been using it for over a year for work, and this entire time I have been DESPERATE for a simple connect verts function that doesn't involve the knife tool. You have changed my ENTIRE world with that one tip alone.
Leith R Haha glad to help
Great video. Enjoyed the hell out of it. Ive been using blender for years. Blender is such a powerful tool now. I knew most of these things but even experienced people can learn more. Thanks for the video
Amazingly done. Thank you. For anyone else that tried the Knife Tool cutting all the way through tip.. he said press C, not Z.
You sir, Are my hero. I've been needing something like this for so long! Thank you for putting your time into us.
just wanted to say that in my opinon this is th bst tutorial out there, no bull shit, just straight to th oint hlpful tips one after the other. I will be watching this a lot of times. Thank you!!
doodle daddle Aw, man this made my day (: thank you so much! I hope the video is helpful to you!
A few months back I've been struggling to find anything that could help me use Blender and be able to work with people using expensive CAD softwares that aren't available for students (unable to save project file, unable to open project file made initially in the fully-licensed version of let's say ArchiCad), 16:37 this is what I was looking for and I'm so grateful to you for this information, and everything else, subscribed. Going to share this video with everyone I know who use Blender.
Wow! Much appreciated. Glad to know I could help!
#20 8:07 More that can be done.
After making a selection I used shift-click to de-select one point. Then by using numpad+ and numpad- I was able to add or delete points based on this new location.
Thanks Daniel for making this video.
Dude, thank you so much!!! This video it's a life changer to me
That's great to hear! I'll have some great news for you in about 5 minutes
Thank you @Daniel Krafft for taking insane action and saving us all beginners a few months of time in research and learning!! With @Patrick Wilson
's table of contents this has become a daily go-to video! Cannot appreciate this enough. Thanks a ton!!!
Thanks for watching :D
Thanks youtube algorithm, I came looking for copper and found gold
Eduardo Gonzalez Thanks so much man. Proud to have helped!
For #11 at 04:42 you also need to add a "Cast" modifier, set it to Sphere, and factor 1. Even with 6 levels of subdivision, a cube will not be spherical! It will have parts that stick outside a UV sphere of the same size.
Glad to see you're getting such a strong following after only 3 months, you deserve it for just this video alone. not all heroes wear capes.
Thanks so much! Means a lot
OMG. I have no idea about who the hell you are, but love you already! Tkd, dude!
Happy to help! Thanks mate
Cool! Not seen the whole video yet, but:
#2: This can be done even faster/simpler: Just select the objects, and Alt+Click on any parameter you want to adjust. That's it - the change will be made to all of the selected objects.
Vit Kovalcik Great tip! Thanks for the comment
I'm ten minutes in and my mind is already blown! 🤯 Amazing work my dude! Thank you!
Glad I could help(: Anytime
This is the kind of video that makes me think we live in a great era and that humanity was worth it :)
Thank you for your help
No problem dude! Thanks so much (:
Thank you for this video! I have learned a TON just by watching and taking note of the things I can understand at my level. I'm setting myself a calendar reminder to revisit this video once a month to see what else I can learn. Your last tip - avoid being perfectionist - was also very valuable as that has been a big hurdle to get a grasp of Blender's breathtaking capabilities.
thanks for sharing! in my first month of using a 3D software, i have surprisingly discovered most of these tips! it was an amazing journey and it's a fun addictive software. just sad i just discovered my passion for 3D at 37 lol.
Absolutely Amazing! Really appreciate the hard work and time you put in to putting this together, definitely helps out so many people!
Thanks man! I'm glad to hear it
Just started learning Blender and have already watched many tutorials. But this video stands out and is incredibly insightful and amazing. The pacing is spot on. Well done and THANKS!
Oh and I don't understand the hate for the pop audio transition. I found it useful as it clearly indicates when you're starting a new tip. Without it, the tips may blend together a little too much. Clear separation is good.
Thanks so much! I got like, a lot of comments hating on the pop sound so I removed it in my latest video.. Maybe they are the outspoken minority? I'll do a poll on this soon. Thanks again
This is part of why 2020 will be so amazing, thank you!
Thank you so much! Amidst all the chaos of 2020, I'm glad my video was a high point for you (:
You were wrong
@@bedbathandblender1168 Developments in Blender, have nothing to do with police brutality and a pandemic. I actually see this as much needed reform so the rest of this decade can be amazing. please, go somewhere else
This aged like milk lamo
amazing tutorial, i had to stop every 10 minutes or so to digest everything cause i love this software and want to enjoy my time with it, the second to last tip was one of my favorites, i just rendered and edited a video on blender today and just sharing with people made my day
i didn't even mind effing up an alpha over channel that happened when i made a meta strip
I thought this video might be good, but the first tip alone blew me away alone, time to sink 55 mins into this. Great work
First step: light a monkey’s head on fire
Second step: make a donut
*now you’re a master*
lol
R u talking about blender G...ru!
@@NishantKumar-hp1jv Everybody follows him.
knowing all of these tips but still watching the whole video feels strange,
otherwise, it's GREAT!
That's a lot to be shared around. keep it up! :D
Datowda Animates Thanks for watching man! It means a lot to me (:
@@DanielKrafft you definitely deserve more mate
Datowda Animates Thank you Datowda. I’ll keep at it! I’m very grateful for all the feedback and comments like this one... thank you so much!
On the subject of backgrounds - HDRI Haven offers superb back plates to complement their great HDRIs
This is awesome! I wasn’t aware of this. Thanks for sharing!
I'm tired and read "contemplate their great HDRIs" and it still made sense :)
As a beginner these can save me a lot of time instead of getting confused and frustrated,Great work man
Symmetrize, #92, is useful for armatures. If you put .r at the end of the name of your bones then symmetrize them, it will mirror them and also change the names correctly to .l and vice versa. I'm pretty sure this helps with flipping poses and stuff like that.
43:06 i would recommend to use intel's denoising that comes in 2.81 i think. It is *much* better than blender's default denoiser.
Thanks for the tip man. Appreciate it
@@DanielKrafft It is indeed way better than the standard denoiser, you've got to check it out! make sure to enable denoising data under render passes and plug in the denoising Normal/abledo in the compositor whilst using the node for the best results.
It's awesome.
yeah using the regular denoising isn't worth it cuz it increases the render time tenfold
@@batwithahat312 Actually if you use it properly it decreases render time by a large amount. First you lower your samples. Normally in blender you use high sample counts to have less noise and cleaner image. But if you lower your samples to a much smaller number, you'll get a messy image covered in noise but the denoiser only does 1 pass so really compared to high sample images it's much faster.
Symmetrize is used over mirror in situations where naming conventions come into play. For example, an armature, naming each bone down one side of the skeleton ending with _l or _r will automatically rename the symmertrized bone to the opposite side 😁
Thanks for the tips!
This is amazing dedication!
Hmm want to plus it? Add time code links to each tip in the description 😉
Patrick Wilson Hey! Someone was kind enough to comment the timecodes. Will add them to the description today
@@DanielKrafft the person that added those time codes was also named Patrick Wilson but with a different profile pic... The plot thickens! 🤔
It took me about 3 instances to finish watching the whole thing but was super helpful till the very end ;) Thank you so much for making this!
Almost all of this is way over my head as I'm a total beginner, on day 3, but I find watching stuff like this very handy when getting into new things. It paints a picture of whats possible and when I have an issue I have the mental framework of whats possible to solve it... even if I can't do it off the top off my head :)
10:33 oh my god... I LOVE YA! I was wondering why they got rid of de old Shift+Tab, but this is way more convenient. My hero
Love you too
50:43 "we've only got a few more bare with me"
Well then, hurry up when your helping us for free by doing countless hours of research for us. Meanie
Great video by the way! Thanks for the hard work bringing this information together in one place.
Thanks so much! Comments like these make my week (: I appreciate it
29:44
"if you ever tried to fill a circle with F, you just created the MOST OBSCENE NGON ever"
hahahahahha
Alumx l’m so glad some of the humor landed... I’m filming all my videos after midnight now lol
@@DanielKrafft Don't ruin your sleep too much though!
2944 is the number of CUDA cores in a 2080.
A really big thanks. In my efforts to switch from Cinema 4D to Blender you showed a bunch of tips that directly help with the transition.
Awesome! Glad that I could help!
Man you are legend. One of the most useful blender tutorial ever. Thank you
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed (:
I'm the subscriber number 1000😍
My. Guy. Turn that bell on you're gonna be pretty glad you subscribed in a few days. I'm feeling so grateful right now this has made me so humbled and glad.
had me dead when u animated the eyes haha
haha good to know! Thanks
@@DanielKrafft I subbed because of your laugh ahaha !!
Me seeing this as a beginner : this guy is my new best friend
Same
He just saved me so much time with this video
Out of all the videos I have seen on blender this is by far the best one! Thank you so much for taking the time to explain things very well! I learned alot more from this video! Kudos!
This video is so satisfying to watch while all the small lacks of knowledge were filled all along the video! Thanks so much for making this.
in relation to ALT G and ALT R - you forgot ALT S to reset scale , and ALT O to reset origin
ian pretorius Good tips! Thanks for sharing I didn’t know about alt-o
Thanks for this too !
#99: "Perfect is the enemy of the good"
Well spoken
Feels like my whole life was just ok & this video is my foster parents telling me i was adopted.
Thank you for this!! Extra tip to add to#23 8:42 Quick Eyedropper:
You can also hover over the "Focus Distance" box under Camera > Depth Of Field, press “e” on the keyboard, and then click anywhere in your scene to get the distance for that point. I find this more helpful than the "Focus on Object" eyedropper :)
Hey that’s a pretty good tip! Thanks!
Daniel Krafft - Oops, edited my comment to add in the bit about pressing “e” while hovering :)) Actually, it was only from your video that I learned the “e” stands for eyedropper! Now it makes sense.
Undoubtedly THE Best BLENDER TIP VIDEO/COLLECTION IN THE ENTIRE TH-cam PLATFORM! Or even in the entire web🔥. A Million Thanks Man😁
Thanks! I'm glad you found it helpful(:
Blender drinking game:
Drink whenever you see a tip you wish you knew a year ago
Someone should really make a quizlet or something with all these shortcuts
I swear, every few seconds I'm thinking: "No waaaaay"
Awesome!
If I was a girl, I would fall in love with the author. For the way he laughs and for his nice voice.
I just did !
@Anwar El-Omari You've got it wrong).
Imagine a soccer player scoring a beautiful goal, a boxer striking a precise shot, an archer hitting the middle of a target. It's all beautiful and praiseworthy. Likewise, the author has beautiful things that evokes a sense of beauty. I'm sure his voice could be that of the best movie characters in the movies!
Wow such flattery!
Ive only been trying out blender for a few weeks, but this is the best video i have seen.
45:10 one of the most real and joyful laugh on this planet. Great compilation, thanks a lot, specially for the walk feature.
(: I'm so glad you enjoyed. Thanks!
Hmmm... I am thinking this tip would be awesome for EXPERIMENTING with different editing options. Then later pick the one you like best. You could use the time line to store various edits before deciding on the best one.
Hex code colour copying - Its easier than that, just drag the colour swatch to the other. Its something they copied off SoftImage RIP
Awesome tip! Thanks
TH-cam Algorithm After Recommending This: "Maybe I don't want to be the bad guy anymore"
9:29 huge cringe factor in 2/3 of all Blender-tuts on YT
GWizofKOz It had to be said
Dude, I spent so much time this week getting rid of edges that weren't properly connected to anything. #16, use J, pure excellence 🤩
Hey, if you format the timestamps like this:
0:00 Beginning
0:20 Tip #1: Drag & Drop Materials
etc etc
and drop it in your description, TH-cam will automatically split your video's timeline into chapters!
This video is incredible, by the way. I may be suggesting this selfishly so I can use the chapters to find the tips for reference.
Awesome job!
11:25 i dont feel so good...
Watched all of these tips and filled 2 pages in my sketchbook of notes. Awesome work! Looking forward to see what you do in the future
Thanks man!
Jeese, Design School Online, you've put so much time and effort into making this video. Very useful stuff, especially for newcomers to Blender. Thanks.
No problem! Glad you enjoyed
Killer vid, must see for all Blender users out there. Thx for the time you spent in gathering those and making the video.
No problem! Glad you enjoyed