My limited experience has taught me to avoid the stuff.
But what I've learned:
Get a bunch of cheapo plastic gloves, rubber gloves, whatever is cheap. A bunch.
Get a bunch of cheap paint brushes, as stiff as you can find and no bigger than 2" wide.
Get a bunch of foil loaf pans, these are a nice size to mix and brush the resin from.
The idea of using cheap plastic cups for measuring is good, you can buy paper cups with measuring graduations printed inside but clear cups work fine, just measure how high 1 cup of water is and mark the cups at that height. Buy or steal a bunch of wooden coffee stirrers or "popsicle sticks" for mixing the resin. Plastic ones may dissolve in the resin and are too flimsy anyway.
Cut the random mat or woven cloth with scissors you don't like, cutting glass will ruin them for anything else. Be careful with the matt, it sheds fibres that are amazingly itchy when they get in your clothes (unavoidable, as far as I know).
The instructions always want you to dip the fibreglass sheet/strip in the resin: DON"T DO IT! This turns the relatively easy-to-handle dry cloth into a great slimy ball of sticky snot, shedding incredibly sticky and annoying slimy fibre strands. Brush some resin on your form or whatever, lay the dry cloth carefully on the resin - it will stick in place but you can mold it into place with a fibreglass squeegee.
Once you have resin on your gloves or hands, handling the cloth becomes comical - it just sticks to you and you can't let go. So change gloves for each application of cloth.
Then brush more resin on and work the surface with the squeegee until the cloth is saturated and as bubble free as you can manage.
Mixed properly, the resin will be reasonably liquid for about 15 minutes and unusably thick after a half hour. So only mix small batches at a time.
Each mix usually means sacrificing a cup, pan, brush, mixing stick, and several pairs of gloves.
With this system I have done pretty good body repairs on cars, but I've never tried making a tank or cafe seat.
It's still a stinky, messy, itchy... nasty job.