@MichelleKrizovnik Sorry for that. The commands I believe you were looking for were "inset" by selecting all the top faces the shortcut to it is "I". The next command to it was the "bevel" command which is performed by CTRL+B and dragging the mouse.
@@AKASYNC101 Thanks for the reply! I ended up figuring out, you used it again when the keystrokes where not against the white. Thanks for the tutorial too, I`m starting with Blender and it`s been really helpful. I`m almost finishing part 1. ✌✌
amazing..thank you for great video
Супер!
What were the commands used at 3:30?
@MichelleKrizovnik Sorry for that. The commands I believe you were looking for were "inset" by selecting all the top faces the shortcut to it is "I". The next command to it was the "bevel" command which is performed by CTRL+B and dragging the mouse.
so good! Thanks!!!!!
thanks very helpful
Thanks for the video, unfortunately the background of the reference picture is white and the buttons that you press can't be seen.
Yeah I know... Sadly I didn't think of that earlier... But if you are stuck on anything, I would gladly help out with the invisible commands.
@@AKASYNC101 I figured it out, but thanks for the reply anyways! You make very good videos.
what was the command used at 3:04?
I believe it's g+g (tap g twice) to slide vertices along a particular edge.
@@AKASYNC101 thanks
what was the command at 5:45?
"J" (To join two vertices) select both vertices and hit "J".
@@AKASYNC101 I did that it deforms the whole section
what was the command used at 1:56? Does anybody know?
"Ctrl + B" + mouse drag... Shortcut for bevel. Scroll up to increase the bevel count and scroll down to lower the bevel count.
@@AKASYNC101 Thanks for the reply! I ended up figuring out, you used it again when the keystrokes where not against the white. Thanks for the tutorial too, I`m starting with Blender and it`s been really helpful. I`m almost finishing part 1. ✌✌
Glad it's helpful .... Keep blending...