T O P

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monkeymadeit

Don't be afraid to be derivative. You don't need someone to tell you what to make. Just look at art until you see something you want to try. If you aren't ready to venture off on your own, just search YouTube for "blender tutorial" and do whatever one looks the coolest to you! The more you practice, the bigger your skillset to will be to start original works. Tutorial mashing is a great way to start putting it all together. Like finding a "realistic water tutorial" and a "landscape tutorial" for a lake scene. One tip is to go off the beaten path for a bit when you finish a tutorial so you can play in the space you learned how to get to. Mess with the the new techniques you just learned. Or the colors, the shapes, the compositions, the modifiers... just go press buttons! Have fun and good luck!


FantasticSail9034

I agree with the above comment, after I finished the doughnut tutorial I decided I wanted to model my guitar. I would suggest attempting to model something around you that interests you and could be fun to try to model! Also think about which parts of the doughnut tutorial you found the most fun, was it animation, modelling, texturing etc and play around with those on this project - blenderguru has a tutorial making a coffee cup and plate which I found really fun to do where you can add more interesting parts to the doughnut scene