You might also research reflow ovens and hot plates. I picked up a 2000W electric Ceran grill to explore and refine the latter, and will return to that once I finish some microscope projects.
That is a really important point. You have to decide what are your own goals and whether you are more interested in assembly or rework. You can get a good assembly setup much cheaper and easier: an oven, a $20 vacuum tool, and some solder paste. Rework might only need a hot air gun but it can also rapidly become expensive with the endless temptations of specialist tips, irons, hot tweezers, air tools, etc that really are a great pleasure to use.
I decided early on that I'm mostly interested in rework. I further decided that I will treat assembly as a special case of rework: a fresh new board is "really" just a board on which every component is faulty (missing) and needs to be corrected (soldered on.) So here I am now with almost ten different iron/tweezer/air soldering tools but no reflow oven and having never tried applying a stencil, just because I am not interested in trying that until after I have mastered rework.
Most people think I'm being very eccentric and suggest it would be much cheaper, faster, and more reliable to use stencil and reflow oven. I'm sure that's true when everything goes well. I'm just imagining that sooner or later I'll need to do some important rework of expensive boards and I'll be glad to have mastered the skills instead of making my all my beginner mistakes "on the job" with production boards. (I also wonder how other people developed their rework skills in the first place, and how much money they spend on buying fresh components for each prototype instead of reusing more old ones.)
Lots to think about and some very personal decisions to make. I suppose that it comes down to budget too: do you want to do things as economically as possible or is there a particular amount of money that you are trying to invest in developing your electronics capabilities.