How to Use a WoW Blacksmith Guide

When you choose your professions in World of Warcraft, one of the most helpful is Blacksmithing as you're able to make some very powerful high-level weapons and armor for your characters. Trying to level up your Blacksmithing profession unassisted can mean you spend large amounts of time and in-game gold getting now. In order to save you from wasting your gold and materials, you should use a WoW blacksmith guide to help you on your way.

There are inexperienced players in WoW who spend large amounts of time and in-game gold buying items in an effort to level up their Blacksmithing profession, only to find out that they either bought the wrong materials or spent too much time mining for ores that will not help their blacksmithing needs. Using a WoW blacksmith guide will help you find the exact materials you need without wasting any of your gold on buyingthe wrong materials on the Auction House.

When you first learn your Blacksmithing profession, a WoW blacksmith guide will tell you that you'll need to find plenty of Rough Stone and Coarse Stone for the first few things you learn to make. These stones can be mined easily on your own if you also learn the Mining profession at the same time. Each time you mine rocks and veins of copper or silver as a new miner, you'll end up finding plenty of stone. While most other miners will throw these away or sell them, you can use them to level your Blacksmithing profession very quickly up to around level 75.

At this level, you should visit a trainer to upgrade your Apprentice Blacksmith status up to Journeyman. You should also have collected a lot of copper during your initial mining efforts. If you read ahead in your WoW blacksmith guide, you've already know you'll need quite a lot of copper bars once you reach level 90, so be sure you do not sell the copper ore you smelt. Keep the bars at the bank until you need them.

You'll find that your mining skill will increase quickly so that you'll be mining silver and tin very quickly. Keep these and smelt them into bars. If you can smelt tin and copper to create bronze bars, then begin doing this as your WoW blacksmith guide will show you the blacksmithing patterns that will require silver and bronze bars to make several patterns too.

Your WoW blacksmith guide will outline exactly what materials you'll need to get through each level, but besides the raw stones and ore you'll need, you may also need to buy other associated materials to mix with these to make the patterns.

At the lower levels, many of the items you'll make can be helpful to your character. For example, a WoW blacksmith guide can show you how to make bronze leggings or bronze shoulder pad and bracers that can increase your armor. While these are not high level armor pieces, they will save you gold from having to buy them on the Auction House.

When your character reaches level 150, visit a trainer and upgrade your Journeyman status to Expert Blacksmithing. You'll learn more difficult patterns that will make you some even higher-quality gear. At this level, finding and mining enough ore can be quite difficult, so you may need to buy any ore you need from the Auction House. This is where your WoW blacksmith guide can help you figure out exactly what you need and how many you should buy.

At level 220 you'll need more training to upgrade from Expert up to Artisan Blacksmithing and you'll probably need to consult your WoW blacksmith guide to find your nearest trainer for this. While the plans and patterns you'll learn at this level are much more difficult to find the materials for, you should still benefit from making some great high-level armor. You can also consider specializing your Blacksmithing into weapon specialties when you reach level 300 and upgrade your training once again to Master Blacksmithing.