Blender Character Design Course »

“Your first character will be ugly,” Mara typed.

The Singer used to make storms with its voice. The Weather Child was born from one of those storms. But the Singer broke itself singing too long. Now The Fixer repairs what she loves most slowly, badly, but daily. The Child waters the flower because the Singer can no longer ask for help. They are a family of broken parts. And that is enough. Option 3: I think you meant — “Blender character design course produce a story” as an assignment for students Course prompt you could give your students: “Design 3 characters who cannot speak the same language. Using only pose, expression, and one shared prop, tell a 10-second story with a beginning, middle, and end. No animation required — 3 still renders. Write the 50-word story beneath.” Example student answer (which itself is a tiny story): Render 1: A scarecrow offers its hat to a fox. Render 2: The fox places a single seed inside the hat. Render 3: The scarecrow wears the hat again. A green sprout curls from the brim. Story: “The fox remembered the scarecrow’s kindness. The scarecrow remembered the fox’s hope. Neither spoke. The corn grew anyway.” Which version were you looking for? I can write a full 3-act story, a student’s journey through the course, or a concrete assignment with rubric and character sheets. Just tell me which path.

A tiny flying creature (sewn from rags, with butterfly wings made of old maps). Sits on The Fixer’s shoulder. Holding a single raincloud the size of an apple. Pose: sprinkling water onto the wilted flower. Expression: utterly serious.

Week 6: animation. Elara kneaded dough. The timing was off. The hands clipped through the table. Mara spent three nights on just the wrist rotation. blender character design course

→ Turns into this story:

A tall, gaunt woman with toolbelt-apron hybrid. Weld marks on her goggles. Always carries a bent fork. Pose: kneeling, fixing a small robot’s foot. Expression: annoyed but tender.

No dialogue. Twelve seconds of animation. “Your first character will be ugly,” Mara typed

She smiled. Elara’s smile. Course assignment: Design 3 characters who share one world. No dialogue. Show their relationship through pose, prop, and expression.

Mara animated Elara discovering her scales were broken. Elara tapped them. Frowned. Held a single strawberry on one side, then a walnut. The walnut was heavier. She swapped them. Smiled. The strawberry rose.

Six months later, Mara opened her own Blender file not as a student, but as a teacher. Her first student? A ceramicist who’d never touched a computer. But the Singer broke itself singing too long

By Week 2, her character (a baker named Elara) had no ears and one eye orbiting outside her skull. Mara almost quit. Instead, she joined the course’s Discord. A teenager in Finland showed her how to fix the eye with a single constraint. A grandmother in Argentina shared a shader for realistic bread textures.

A rusted automaton with a cracked voicebox (literal crack modeled in Blender using a boolean modifier). Holds a wilted flower. Pose: one hand reaching toward The Fixer, one hand covering its chest speaker. Expression (via eye glow intensity): dim, flickering.

“Your first character will be ugly,” the course instructor, Nico, warned in the welcome video. “That’s not a bug. That’s the first draft of courage.”

The course gallery went live. Mara’s clip sat between a cyberpunk mercenary and a sad robot. Hers had 47 views. One comment, from Nico: “You made her think. That’s not character design. That’s character.”