So first of all congrats, for everything you are doing here, amazing workflow and nice teaching methods and guides
My question is, when you messed some vertices up, or something went wrong along the proccess, but you realised later on, when you are way far for cmd + Z, how can you tell where you messed up, and how can you repair
The main concern for me is NORMALS bleaaaah, i mean i can't get along with them, but i need to understand them, normals are complicated when i work with polygons or with any other object ... i dont know if i spoke correctly but i try my best, i am a begginer so ... ty so much again for the courses i am looking forward to watch new tutorials and learn from you guys, thinking of buying a course ty again have a nice day or keep up the good work
Hello. Don't worry, that happens all the time. You're working and working and you think you're finished, only to realize basically by luck that there's something wrong somewhere. Not only that, a lot of times you don't even realize it and you upload a model and hand it over, only to be turned back by another team because geometry is wrong. There's tools and addons that check your mesh for you, so you don't have to worry too much. So in the end, it's good practice to check your model, orbit it, in object mode for weird shading or in edit mode for weird edge flow or geometry.
HI Stefan MMaBurrito749 ,
It is indeed not uncommon, like OImar said. And sometimes it's easy to fix, sometimes it's near impossible, by the time you notice something is wrong.
It is a good idea, to get into the habit of making Incremental Saves regularly, so that if you need to re-do something, you don''t have to start all over, but can go back to a version, before you made the mistake, or to a time, when it was still easy to fix.
There are a lot of new terms to learn when starting 3D and some of them, will take time to understand; don't worry about that, you will learn them, just don't let it hold you back, when you don't understand something yet, keep moving and then at some point, it will 'click' and you go: "Oh, so that's what Normals are all about!".
Happy learning!