When I built my previous garage I hired a friend who knew framing. He did most of the work and I filled in as extra hands. It was a 28.8 x 48 structure with a 3' wide overhang on the north side to provide a covered walkway to the house, standard 1' overhang the other three sides. Worked well with the house and looked good. When we had trimmed the truss tails he asked what I planned for the subfascia boards and I replied with 1x6s. Nope he said, gotta use 2x6s, for that length and the 24" spacing between the trusses it'll give you a much straighter fascia. Reluctantly I spent the extra bucks to get a bunch of long 2x6s, and he was right. Once we got the fasica trim up, it looked straight for the entire 50' fascia run.
When I built my current 24x28 shop this past 2020, I did the same. I had a hired friend do the framing/walls, and got the trusses on the top plate. I did the rest, including stick framing a front hip and rear hip, each at different pitches. For the subfascia I ran a string front to back to create a straight line to trim the truss tails. Then made a hanger bracket so I could get the 2x6s up by myself, and nailed in place once they aligned to another string I ran to make sure they were all straight along the bottom edge. Again worth the extra cost and effort to put them up. Like said above, the initial framing, walls, joists. trusses, sheeting all look like you got so much done so fast. But the small details when it comes to fascia, soffit and trim is what really shows that you did the basics right and got everything straight, plumb and square.