There are pens available that are refillable and instead of a fountain pen tip they have a brush. Sometimes they are sold for calligraphy, sometimes for watercolour, but buying one of these and filling it from a large bottle of flux is much longer lasting and cost effective than buying flux pens.
Isopropyl alcohol 99% in large quantities. Wash boards with it, clean flux off, clean tools, 3D printing,. so many uses. Don't bother buying 99.9999%, it is hygroscopic and you will pretty soon have 99% once the lid is off, but much less money.
Brass wool to clean your soldering iron tip. Wet sponges are not as good. Hakko sell these separately if you don't want a Hakko iron.
An Edsyn Soldapullt solder sucker. These are the best. Engineer brand have some good ones too but be warned cheap no-name ones are not really worth it.
Double-ended swabs on wooden sticks are a little nicer for cleaning flux off small areas than q-tips. Always clean your flux off.
Soldering in a shallow tray is a very good way to keep all the little bits of snipped-off wick, old swabs, lumps of solder etc. from falling on the floor. When you clean up move everything off the tray then tip the contents of the tray into the bin after checking for anything valuable.
Clean up frequently. Nothing makes a mess as quickly as building/fixing electronics and the cleaner your work area the better and less frustrating your work will be.
Keeping the light level good and steady is important. If you are going to use a fluorescent light make sure it is a high frequency electronic ballast, not the old flickery kind.
A high quality magnifier on a movable arm with a bright ring light around it will make your close inspections easy.
A small microscope with LCD is a good thing for checking things like 0.5mm pitch component legs to ensure you haven't bridged them with solder. If you have money to burn get a really nice binocular microscope with provision for video output and display that on a big LCD monitor that is mounted on a monitor arm.
At the very least have a fan blowing across your workspace so the flux smoke doesn't just go straight up your nose. Best is something like a Hakko filtered extraction system but not cheap.