The tutorial series is amazing. Thanks Kent. I'm literally in awe how you are able to figure out what does what in the shader editor. If I did a project on my own, I could certainly use the materials throughout this series as a starting point, and if I'm being honest, would be lost if I had to create something from scratch to achieve certain looks.
How did you know the shader can do, for example, a grungy look? I imagine it is from experience, but is there a website that gives you examples and how to achieve those specific looks?
Thanks everyone.
Thanks so much for the kind feedback iitaliano19! It means a lot :)
Believe it or not, I harbor this same feeling about Geometry Nodes. Despite my comfort in the shader editor, GN just hasn't clicked with me (yet, I hope).
My shader nodes proficiency is simply a result of time and practice. Picking up one technique at a time, implementing it so it sticks. Over time they compound and intertwine until you're very familiar with what needs to be done to achieve a certain look.
While "time and practice" isn't usually encouraging, here's a list of my most (re)used material components:
So long all my materials have some degree of those components, they will be more believable and appealing. If you keep watching my courses, notice how these drive my decisions. I might implement them in different ways or alter them relative to the project, but they're at the core of my materials.
Hopefully that short list is encouragingly digestible.
Also believe it or not, Blender is such a huge beast, you tend to forget a lot of stuff, that even teachers have to re-watch their own tutorials to remember how to do something. So that to say, don't worry too much, there is no brave Blender ultra warrior out there that is unchallenged by the huge amount of information 3D software's tend to demand from you. Some things sticks, others don't and you have to troubleshoot a lot, research stuff you once already knew and Blender develops much faster that you can learn stuff. Such is the way (Crowd repeats in unison) Such is the way!.
Thank you both for taking the time to reply. This is both very informative and educational (no idea teachers re-watched their own tutorials). Have a good one.