I learned on agate from Arizona and Georgetown flint. It was available at my local landscaper supply yard. I also tried tempered glass, beer bottle glass, and plate glass. I used steel/copper boppers and steel/copper pressure flakers.
If I had to do it all over again, I would have used the highest quality flint, hammer stones, and antler. Period. My flintkanpping was going nowhere until I switched to highest quality Georgetown, cooked Edwards chert, soft stone abraiders, hammerstones, and the best antler I could get. After a year of using antler, I switched back to copper and steel and the light went on. DAMN! SO THIS IS WHAT THEY CALL THE "KNAPPERS HIGH". It was like the feeling you get when jogging actually feels good, finally.
If you insist on using a very hard material, then here's my advice. This is just one opinion.
Use the hardest tools you can get your hands on: hard steel (not mild steel), hard hammerstones, grinding wheel abraiders, and diamond files. You also need to minimize your pressure flaking and get good at percussion - direct and indirect. You can get thin flakes from Ryolite if you use very soft boppers, but you will break those flakes when you start to shape them.
It may surprise you that many real artifacts have step fractures. Sometimes, the real points look rather crude but they worked for their intended purpose.
There are a few goals you should be concerned with:
Is it the right shape?
Is it the right size?
Is it the right thickness?
Is it SHARP?
Do not be concerned with:
Will someone want to buy this?
Is it purdy?
Is it cute?
Is it beautiful, lovely, etc. etc...
Ryolite is miserable stuff for someone who wants to produce points that are razor thin and look like a million bucks. It's not going to happen.
Ryolite is awesome stuff for someone who likes a material that will stand up to a lot of abuse.