In my and my Lancia's case, I did decide to learn and practice on a relatively inexpensive car (the Lancia I got really cheap). In addition, I started with cutting, fabricating and welding in places that would be invisible once the car is finished: chassis, floor boards, inner fenders etc. I am sure my early results are 70% visually, and 95% functionally, on par with the average restoration shop's work. Once I got the hang of the metalwork and welding, I moved onto the visible sections, most notably the fenders. Those I am pretty sure I did as well as a good shop would have, honestly. It's so much fun and rewarding to see the car go from basket case to an as-good-as-new car, under my own amateur hands. Plus, a restoration like this would have easily cost over $50K to have done professionally, on a $30K car. 1,000 hours at ... $50-60 an hour?
Anyways ... Bossjoe, I hope you go for it and enjoy the process as much as I am.
The Volkswagen 411 I got a couple of weeks ago I am now readying for paint. Cutting, fabricating, welding etc. Ordered the paint yesterday ($308 delivered for a gallon mixed to the original factory color), it will be my practice car for the painting - as this is a $10K car - before I attempt to paint the $30K Lancia. All this so that I can eventually confidently do a full restoration on my Pagoda - that will then become a $100K car (luckily the engine is already done!).