![]() ![]() (for this one I suggest you also use more A.N.T landscape tools than what he uses in the tutorial, like erosion, to get a more realistic result. If you want to make a landscape, here are those I recommend : Blender has evolved way too much since 2011 and there are very good recent nature tutorials on youtube. Thanks for your help and any suggestions you can offer! So do any of you have experience with Nature Academy? Is it worth minimum $297 USD ($375 Canadian, which is what I use) now, or would my money be better spent with say, following more Youtube tutorials and buying the grass essentials pack and/or getting textures from Poliigon? I'm not trying to be cheap, but since money is a finite resource, I'd like to spend it the best way I can. I've done some searching in this subreddit and found nothing posted about Nature Academy for a few years. ![]() In this post, Andrew himself admitted that Nature Academy is very outdated dated. I almost pulled the trigger on signing up for Blender Guru's Nature Academy, but saw that it only covers the Blender Render. I'm not an artist by training, so I'm trying to decide what resources I want/need, and how I can best spend my time to improve my skills. I've done most of the basic ones now, the doughnuts, bread, the earth, the fur ball, a glass of beer, and now I want to start branching out into my own designs, specifically a nature scene, something like this. I started getting into 3D modeling a couple of months ago, and I've found Andrew Price's tutorials to be very helpful. ![]() TL DR: Is Blender Guru's Nature Academy worthwhile in 2017, or is it too outdated to be worth the money? ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
December 2022
Categories |