I've learned an awful lot of things on Blender from this single 35 minutes than on countless "tutorials" out there. Thank you very much Chris, you are a _true_ educator; and, please, carry on with this Blender series, because it's going to be very useful to a lot of people (not just me)
I second this. Chris's ability to communicate complex subjects to the everyman who doesn't know where to start is second to none to the point that he deserves applause for this
this is not a tutorial. this is some actual education video on blender. with a manner of an actual teacher and professor. giving actual information for actual students... this is not a "walk with me" type of tutorial, this is "look this is how you walk, now walk" type of material. awesome...
I am very impressed: Your breadth and depth of knowledge of tools from programming, creating objects to editing video is amazing! And The ability to convey this to us laypeople. In awe, sir! A proud member of 'Chris University' 900K and growing!
Chris has exceeded even his usual high level of enthusiasm. Watching him, I can imagine myself getting into Blender and getting lost in what psychologists call a flow state. Bravo!
You should be hired to be an official Blender instructor. Seriously. You have conveyed better instructions on Blender's basic use then I've seen in years on RU-vid.
I so greatly appreciate you dedicating some of your own life to teaching us things. It matters a lot and just know that you make such a positive impact to our world!
I've watched many blender video's and have learned more from this one than all the others; the intro was very good and pointed out things other tutorials missed out completely. I hope you continue to make these. Thanks for sharing.
I started blender few days ago and I have been watching tutorials on different channels. I can say this is the best tutorial so far I have seen. He explained what he is doing, why is he doing it, and multiple ways to do it. Blender is different from the other 3D modeling software I have been using. Without proper tutorial it is very difficult and will take a long time to progress. Hope to see more tutorials from this channel. Thank you.
The Best tutorial of blender 3d modelling I have ever watched. I watched hours of lecture but this single 35 minutes video has more knowledge than the hours of lecture I watched. Thankyou sir☺
@Zodiac_dz It was great stuff...and you noticed that sly dog slid in homework for us without saying it was homework. Now I have to go figure out making those additional pieces, assemble them and then use to cut out those sections from the original material.😊😅
In the early days of my Blender journey, I swear I had the exact same "Ooo, I made a sandcrawler by moving two vectors!!" epiphany you described, EXACTLY as you described it. Get out of my mind!! I agree with the other commenters below - this is one of the clearest tutorials out there. Thank you!
I've been using Blender off and on since about 2015. I'm not even 20 minutes into this video yet, and I've lost track of how many times I've exclaimed aloud "I never knew you could do that!" Thank you so much for making a straightforward Blender tutorial :)
To be honest I deleted the program because I wasn't able to find a good working set of instructions, but now I have and this will help me a lot working with the program again. Why aren't all teachers like you ? Thanks a lot for sharing from Mexico.
You have delivered to us a wonderful tutorial on Blender which is arguably the best on RU-vid and maybe on the whole internet. Your tutorial is clear and concise, the way tutorials should be. Your delivery has contagious enthusiasm. You come across friendly and personable without sacrificing a technical explanation (the way tutorials should be). Truly, the comments I have read say it better than I can. I only wish to sum up my comment with the ever famous line from a very popular sci fi show, "May you live long and prosper, " and continue making our lives better with Explaining Computers.
I've seen a lot of videos about Blender, from basic to advanced, but none of them gave me all the tricks you showed here and explained in such a clear and simple way. You have great teaching skills!
A brilliant tutorial, thank you so much Chris. I have always struggled with Blender tutorials on RU-vid as they overload you with keyboard shortcuts and try to teach you too many tools at once. I hope this video proves to be very popular, as I am keen to learn more about Blender from you.
This is absolutely brilliant, Christopher. You make everything so easy to follow. I am now officially a Blender user, for sure. Thank you very much for this video. Please continue. 👍😊
This was a really nice intro to blender. Blender does *everyting* and can seem to overwhelming it is nice to pick a specific task and realize that at its core it is not really all that complicated.
The quality difference to the usual "tutorials" out there is insane. I felt pretty comfy around Blender already, but I really wish this would have been my starting point. Could have saved a lot of figuring out myself. I will take this as positive example of how to make educational content, if I for whatever reason feel like making a tutorial myself some day. Tank you.
This is the first video I should have watched at some point when I started learning Blender, I could have saved myself a lot of time researching and on many occasions confusing myself with add-ons just to test if Blender had practical potential for creating precision models. By far this is the video of the first big step to correctly start in the world of Blender with a focus on engineering modeling. It's not bad to use add-ons if they improve the workflow, but sometimes I felt like I was going outside of Blender's native logic, which is impressive how it has evolved. Thank you very much Christopher for sharing your knowledge in a very objective way.
Wow, I've used Blender for some time now for some 'simple' objects, but a lot of what you're showing is completely unknown to me. I am definitely going to use these tips to my advantage. Thanks for sharing!
IDK if I've ever found a video on the internet that is this detailed and understandable. Not what I expected to find when I started this project. He got my like and subscribe less then 20 mins in. You are the hero we needed. lol THANK YOU!
Thank you very much, Christopher. I had been a fan of yours because I was delighted and inspired by your many descriptions of single board computers and your enjoyable "bed-side" manner. I have also been a "Blender-Head" since about 2006, or so. I have ground through many Blender tutorial videos, in the time since then but, I have never experienced a Blender tutorial video as clear and confident as yours. I strongly believe that this is your true calling. You should definitely do some more Blender videos. You have a wonderful sense of humor but, you seem to be thoroughly juiced, in terms of how to use Blender! I hope that you will get more into Blender. Thank you again.
I've watched many Blender videos in order to learn modeling for jewellry, your video is by far the clearest and most concise of all. Thank you! Please keep them coming.
This is a really awesome video, please consider doing a series. Your precise almost CAD-like prototyping approach to Blender is much less common on RU-vid, and is a hugely beneficial skill set to have within the program. I am a proficient user, and still found some of the UI elements you covered to be a valuable refresher for doing more precise work.
Fantastic overview of the basics whilst making an actual object. Easy to follow along. Recommended for those seeking to learn Blender. Great for utilizing bevel and boolean subtraction tools.
Your intro about building something specific is SPOT ON. This is how I operate. I don't need to learn things I may never use. I just want this ONE. THING. DONE!! 😂
This was a great introduction, Chris! I would like to see more videos doing more complex modelling as you mentioned at the end of this video. P.s Congratulations on 900k subscribers!
The fact that you used this bracket in your previous video and now showed how you created it in Blender is very helpful and interesting. I would like to see a video on what you would see as the next logical step in using Blender. Of course, my interest in Blender would be to use it for making mesh items for the virtual world of Second Life. With that being said, I'm not sure just how many of your viewers are interested in creating virtual items. Personally, I hope there are many. This was, yet again, another excellent video and I'm looking forward to your next one! (EDIT): Oh yes, since I do make a few RU-vid videos each year, I would be interested in how to use Blender for creating video animations!
Greetings Perry. The next logical step with Blender is applying materials (surfacing) and making renders. And meshes with textures are what you would need for Second Life. After that, creating animations is relatively straight-forward third step.
I'd definitely be interested in seeing more blender tutorials. While my interests aren't in virtual items, but more for modeling and 3D printing. I'm sure there would be a lot of crossover for both.
Hello. I want to thank you for making this video. I have been searching for what you are teaching on this video and I'm so glad that I found yours. I'm sure that I'll be watching many more of your videos as well Thank you again for taking the time to help out people like me around this world.
At first I thought this would be a total beginner tutorial but I'm baffled by the concise, well explained and thorough content you have made here. This is to show that there are so many "hidden" functions and ways to do things in Blender. I've saved this video to rewatch it every once in a while to make sure I'm using everything shown here. Thanks for the excellent video!
The best I could manage in the last few years was to convert a SVG file into a 3D mesh for use elsewhere. Having seen in the two segments of this clip, I now have a better understanding and that it is more mode-based than I was making it out to be. One of the big issues I've had with so many Blender guide videos, is that the one doing it just goes way too fast and often misses key points, giving no time to take information in and to keep up or just losing the viewer completely. Chris...why aren't there more people like you around!?
there are so many excellent tutorials that do explain it, i do have a video that shows people to go to for Blender and all FLOSS apps, you might find one who is better and there are links in the comments to those same people. but there is Blender Guru, there is people like Kaizen, Derk and Chris P among the many who will walk you through it.
Blender is an amazing tool that I'm going to practice with for my model making work. Thank you Chris for all the hard work that you've put in, an interesting video indeed :)
Hi Chris, gotta comment to say this is great and I hope you produce more. Despite now working in a 3D design and print job (albeit with software that deals only with the specific objects I have to print - they are personalised medical devices for NHS patients), I have been trying to learn Blender for my home projects ever since the free version of Sketchup became hobbled to the point it really has ceased to be useful. I have tried a couple of ‘courses’ by other youTubers only really to become confused before I started. Watching this quick half hour explanation has given me the confidence to go back and look again.
👏👏👏Thank you, thank you, thank you! You teach so that I get what I need to use Blender without being frustrated. I teach how to work in SAP as well as other systems for a living and I don't teach in a way that would be suited for me because my audience has so many people from such different backgrounds and I have to make sure I don't lose them. You teach in a way that is suited for me. It is fast, efficient, covers a lot, and leaves nothing out. I love your sense of humor too. Please keep up the videos. You are incredibly smart and knowledgeable, and I appreciate anything you want to teach in Blender.
Awesome! I love Blender, even though it is so hard to use! I made a basic animation which had a Mclaren 720s going down a highway. It wasn't too bad, but I know there is room for improvement. Nice to see that you made a video on Blender, I have always been waiting for a video like this!
As others have said, your tutorial is exceptional. Well thought out and truly made for the hapless beginner, with concise, easy to follow instructions in a very logical 'baby steps' fashion. You showed and described each step clearly, no confusing jargon, no skipping past salient points, no assuming people will know what you mean, you actually say what you mean. You explain what you're doing, why you're doing it, how to do it and what it does. These four very important steps are so often overlooked but help so much with understanding the process. I've seen many tutorials completed by people following step-by-step instructions with no explanations, they don't understand why they do each step or how each step even works, which means they cannot use what they did in the tutorial for anything else as they have no understanding of how to implement what they 'learned'. So many beginner tutorials assume an already decent understanding and working knowledge of the programs, which invariably leads to confusion and frustration because the tutorials skip so many of the fundamental basics, which to them seem obvious, but to a noob they're far from obvious. Thank you, Chris.
Hi Christopher. It's been said on and on, including by myself, but you do have a sense of effective pedagogy. Which makes each of your posts particularly helpful and instructive as well. Thank you very much. I used to design models with early Blender versions. I switched to Fusion 360 in its free (and so limited) version. Nevertheless I have to work complex models offline and naturally came back to my first love i.e. Blender. I do need some refresh. You helped me. Thank you Sir. Hope you'll make Blender's additional tutorials. Can't wait.
I have watched several engineering modeling videos for Blender. Most try to mimic other programs and/or use plugins that mimic. This is exactly what I was looking for. A video for native editing.
I love your groundbreaking ability to split very complex things into easy-to-understand pieces so I would really love to see more videos like this from you. I am particularly interested in blender lessons because I want to learn 3D modeling. And, of course, it was really fun to follow your steps while watching this video. Sadly, I wasn't patient enough to make the one-to-one model replica but I managed to replicate the most of the things (I didn't make a VGA hole and reset hole). 👀
time and repeat task and you will get there, if in doubt just create the bit you didn't manage on its own you can always drag the file onto blenders main window and append the object to your other one, and move it into place!
Thank you so much! There are many Videos on RU-vid with Blender 3D Topics, BUT yours was best to understand. Really easy to follow, even as a non english native! (Switzerland) 👍🏻
Absolutely fantastic video Chris. You should make this into a series of video's, I bought a 3D printer just before Christmas. The only things I have printed are things I downloaded.. Using Blender will open a hole new world of possibility's for me.. Thanks So Much for the video...The only criticism I have is the fast forwarding through building the other objects... But very much looking forward to more videos like this..
Thanks for this. I totally accept your pint about the fast-forwards. But the video was getting very long, and no new tools were used in those sections. Good luck creating some things to 3D print!
This one may be actually the first video of yours which is actually going to teach me something, not only to hear some news about products and get my memory exercised. The Blender workflow is somewhat different than FreeCAD which i am already getting used to. I will install Blender too, and choose one which suits me better. Or use both, depending on the object i want to model.
I've used both. I my opinion FC is better for precision modelling. In Blender , measurement is too obscure . You can't go back to a specific sketch and easily alter a dimension like you can in FreeCAD
This is such a nice video on how to use blender for 3D printing, so many people should learn this as it really helps when you find a STL that is slightly broken or if you just want to modify it slightly. (or in the end create your own objects) I personally use it for making 3D models for printing and I have recently used it to do video editing (There is better video editors, but its fun).
I found out that SketchUp nearly don't need any knowledge when starting. I once though I use free at to make something to print. Couldn't do anything and remembered I used SketchUp when this was from Google. Startet and did this damn object without even looking for a tutorial. I say for casual using its better because you can create something without learning the Programm.
Thank you Chris for your instructional video on Blender. I've learned some excellent basic modelling skills which previously I didn't really understand!!! You are very precise and well organised in your approach. A lot of Blender videos skip over the very important CAD details you have illustrated!
Finally I got started to use Blender after watching this Video. It's different on the Mac but now I have the most of the basics I need to create 3D printable objects.
Outstanding. Several years back I was told that Blender was for organic models, not engineering or precisely dimensioned models. A quick search of training videos supported the statement. In one video you clearly proved that Blender can clearly function as the primary modeling software for a 3D printer. Thank you for a fantastic video.
This i an amazing tutorial. For many years i have tried to get to use Blender. But until now, with no success. I'm 3-D printing a lot, and i use OpenScad, when I'm drawing my objects. Its a pure mathematical discipline - and I'm better at that, than drawing and modelling. But Blender has some features i just envie. You can animate, make skins and so on. So that's the reason I really appreciate this video. And what didn't come as a surprise to me, because you are a master of teaching. You manage to find the most important things in this extremely complex software. You present it in a way, so the recipient can follow along. I can't thank you enough.
I don’t typically comment, much less watch a video of this length. In the age where attention spans are growing shorter, I watch most RU-vid videos 2x the speed, but I watched this video at regular speed! My ADHD will have me falling asleep or completely distracted normally. This video however, everything was straight to the point, and I appreciate how personable you are! I also chuckled at the little quips. 😆🙌 I am so thankful I found this video because I am just starting out. I tried blender a few years ago, was completely overwhelmed and deleted the program afterwards. However, I went from watching this video, to redownloading Blender. I jumped back in and was able to create a small project, Start to finish. In only a couple of hours! I have never been able to pick up a new skill so quickly, thank you so much and I am off to watch your other video.🙏💗 PLEASE make more videos for Blender!
Thanks for your positive feedback. I am pleased to hear of your success. I have a second Blender video here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-srogwyiO2mI.html
Just wanted to say "Thank you!", because your video has been one of the most helpful videos for a new Blender user like myself. Your pacing is perfect, you clearly narrate what's happening without extra unnecessary dialog, and the quality speaks for itself. Thank you for being a quality content creator!
Thanks for this kind feedback, and good luck with Blender. :) My second video is now uploaded here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-srogwyiO2mI.html
I have blender many years installed in my computer en only a few click i have performed and closed the programs in less than a minute, but this Introduction have been very useful and if there are more videos for sure I'll finish them all.
omg, I just downloaded Blender a few weeks ago for a specific purpose, and avoided even opening it out of learning curve / laziness so I might have to brave it since I know how well you explain things 😊
Fantastic tutorial. I've been using Blender in my hobby for a few years & I've learnt a few things here, no other tutorials explain as simply & efficiently as you do. Please continue the series. Many thanks.
This was honestly the best beginner tutorial I have seen for blender. Thank you. This got me started on blender and I am already halfway into the bracket/pcb thingy. ❤
It’s 03:27 am and I have just subscribed to this channel… great teaching by you has given me the confidence that I can start my journey into this powerful app! Thank you from Melbourne Australia…
Brilliant! This is wonderfully accessible and is the first Blender tutorial that I've actually been able to complete! With others I've just bounced off in confusion. You've made things clear and and understandable and now I can actually do something in Blender!
And, this is why, I love your channel, Christopher you cover everything, from simple (How to's) to the complicated (Blender), there's something for everyone on your channel, I love this computer world, so many possibilities, it's never ending. Have a good rest of your weekend Christopher. As Always, Be Smart and Stay Safe.
An excellent tutorial, which I will have to watch over and over while following the steps. I tried Blender many years ago and found it too complex for me, so I deleted it. Also, at the time, I didn’t have a real need for it. Now, with the popularity of 3D printing, it makes more sense to try and master it.
Thank you so much for this! I've been trying to go through another tutorial but gave up after getting bored. This one has helped me get into the swing of things and feel I can start doing stuff without tutorials now. Especially loved that you didn't focus too much on the keyboard shortcuts and showed the buttons as well. Made it a lot easier to follow and keep notes.
I'm the It guru for my friends group and also includes many their friends but with watching your information packed videos makes me feel like the kid eating glue, in the back of the class room Am always entertained and in awe of your informative videos and often refer back to them, when needing a clearer understanding upon a topic
Thank you, so much, for this, Chris. I've found Blender to be very frustrating and most tutorials as well, but I've left yours feeling surprisingly optimistic.
Thanks for the time and effort you put into making this tutorial. It has been perfect for getting me up to speed with hard surface modeling in blender. I bought a 3d printer on cyber week this year, and relearning blender has been a slow but fun project for me. With the aid of this utorial, I know I will be making brackets, plates, and other models for items around the house and my metal/woodworking shop.
With this I plan to do some stuff in Blender. Going in there and seeing things without this, it can be very confusing indeed. Cannot wait for more Blender videos.
wonderful video, I use blender for making assets in games and I've never thought or seen anyone use the Boolean function like that. Really amazing time saver rather than modeling things bit by bit.
This is a great tutorial for a "maker" like myself trying to learn blender from scratch, for 3D printing. Others spew out mind numbing sequences of hot keys, or focus on creating intricate fantasy scenes, or some other of the many applications of this complex software. Thank you
This will be useful for testing furniture layouts, thanks for the detailed demonstration. I like it that polished software like Blender, GIMP and Libreoffice is free and open source.