Showing how I am a Minion (with what I knew at that time)
I continue to show little by little my picturesque journey, showing the exercises I did to practice what I was learning in the different tutorials and courses on 3D design and animation with Blender.
Unfortunately for this occasion I do not have all the historical files of the Blender program, since due to problems with a USB-pendrive where it transported many of these files, it suffered a setback losing all the information related to those files.
As I am learning, I have a habit of “saving as” many times leaving many copies of what I am modeling in 3D in the process, but in the different stages of design. A kind of if I am fatally and irreversibly wrong, keep copies of each of the steps that I consider in my little experience the most important.
In order to simply go back (following my trail of files left on the path of doing the exercise or independent practice backwards as if tracing the path traveled by following the breadcrumbs that I left behind)
lost almost all the files keeping the initial tests and the last ones with the exercise almost finished so I will not be able to show you a smooth and coherent progress of the exercise shown in this post (doing a kitty) one of my initial classes of the course that I I help train with the support of the digital marketing agency that signed me up and helped me practice on their teams. (At that time, I still did not have a computer capable of starting Blender in versions 2.80 or 2.90.
Despite the difficulties, it was possible for me to continue advancing, learning and improving little by little in the use of this wonderful 3D Design and Animation tool.
I am well aware that I have not yet been able to even scratch the surface in terms of the power and possibilities of Blender, but I am very happy with the exponential advance that I have had throughout all the practices, experiments on my own account and funny mistakes from which I have learned a lot.
I only hope that those who are entering this exciting career find the motivation and encouragement necessary so that with enormous patience and dedication they can develop as artists.