Songwriting: Writing the Lyrics vs Botanical Illustration with Watercolors
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Coursera · Creative Arts
Songwriting: Writing the Lyrics
Domestika · Creative Arts
Botanical Illustration with Watercolors
Per-criterion
Four focused modules move from point of view and song form through prosody (matching lyric to music), rhyme types — perfect, family, assonance and consonance — and rhythm. The object-writing exercise is the standout that Berklee graduates like Gillian Welch credit as the single most valuable thing they took away. Reviewers repeatedly say it taught them more than books or workshops; capped only because it is lyric-focused and assumes you already make music elsewhere.
Pat Pattison is a Berklee professor of 40-plus years, author of Writing Better Lyrics and Songwriting Without Boundaries, and former teacher of John Mayer and Gillian Welch. His Coursera instructor rating is 4.8 from 184 ratings. Learners describe him as a gifted, passionate teacher whose examples make abstract ideas click — the most consistently praised element of the whole course.
Free to audit the full video curriculum; a certificate, graded assignments and peer review require paid enrollment or a Coursera Plus subscription. Reddit's consensus is that the free audit alone delivers most of the value, since you can do the exercises yourself and skip the certificate gate. Hard to beat for a Berklee-grade course.
Assignments are real lyric-writing tasks graded by peer review, which is pedagogically sound but operationally the weakest part. Multiple learners hit an upgrade wall at the first assessment, and the quality of peer feedback swings from genuinely useful to abusive or absent. The exercises themselves are excellent; the grading machinery around them is not.
The tools transfer directly to any genre — songwriters from hip-hop to country report applying object writing, rhyme families and structure to their own work. It will not teach you melody, production or an instrument, so it is one strong piece of a larger toolkit rather than a complete songwriting education.
Seventeen lessons across five units deliver a coherent beginner curriculum: Unit 1 covers materials and instructor influences; Unit 2 (the longest, at six lessons) focuses on foundational watercolour techniques — volume, opaque textures, bright textures, textures with hairs and spines, and rough and dry textures; Unit 3 surveys botanical illustration styles in three lessons; Unit 4 covers plant morphology and botanical composition; and Unit 5 rounds out with digitising the finished work in Photoshop and composing a stationery set. The curriculum's strength is its range — moving from foundational texture exercises to genre-specific botanical styles to real-world application in design output. The ceiling is lesson depth: at two hours and thirty-two minutes across seventeen lessons, the average lesson is under ten minutes, and the Photoshop section (Unit 5) is consistently the most criticised for moving through keyboard shortcuts without sufficient explanation. Thirteen downloadable resources and thirteen exercises supplement the videos and extend the effective learning time beyond what the runtime suggests.
Paulina Maciel — designer, illustrator and founder of Canela Estudio in Guadalajara, Mexico — is described across our sample as calm, clear and genuinely knowledgeable about her subject. Her professional background bridges commercial illustration (branding, packaging, book covers for clients including Palacio de Hierro and Geografía Café) and formal watercolour training at a specialist academy, and her teaching style reflects both: technically grounded exercises delivered with a patient, unhurried tone that multiple reviewers specifically highlight as confidence-building for beginners. The single exception in our sample is the Unit 5 digitising section, where several learners note that Paulina's pace in Photoshop does not match the rest of the course — she relies on keyboard shortcuts and menu navigation that are explained at professional speed rather than beginner speed, creating a jarring contrast with the rest of the curriculum's measured pacing.
Domestika prices individual courses at $10–$40 during its frequent promotional sales (listed price is typically $70–$80), with lifetime access, a signed completion certificate, thirteen downloadable resources and thirteen exercises included. At sale price, two and a half hours of beginner botanical watercolour instruction with 157,000-plus enrolled students and a 96% positive rating across more than 4,300 reviews represents strong value. The course's application output — a completed botanical illustration digitised and laid out as a stationery set design — gives learners something practically usable at the end of the curriculum, which strengthens the perceived return relative to purely technique-focused alternatives. The Photoshop section's pacing issue is the only meaningful value detractor, as learners without prior Photoshop experience may need to supplement with external tutorials to complete Unit 5 effectively.
The course's capstone project — "Illustrating botanicals" — asks learners to produce a botanical illustration of a real flower from life, digitise it in Photoshop, and apply it to a stationery set design. This is a meaningfully portfolio-ready output: the real-flower observation model distinguishes the project from courses that work from photographs or templates, and the digitising and application arc gives the finished illustration a commercial context that makes it useful in a design portfolio. Unit 3's style exploration lessons (two lessons on botanical illustration styles) give learners enough style vocabulary to make informed choices about their own creative direction before committing to the final project. The limit is that the course produces one primary finished piece rather than a series — learners who want a portfolio of multiple botanical subjects will need additional courses or self-directed practice to build beyond the single composition the curriculum delivers.
The course has an unusually direct line to real-world use: the final project is a stationery set design built from a hand-painted botanical watercolour illustration, which maps directly onto the kind of work that botanical illustrators, surface pattern designers and stationery brands commission. Paulina Maciel's own professional practice is in exactly this domain — branding, packaging, stationery and cover illustration — and her curriculum is structured around the workflow she uses commercially. The inclusion of plant morphology (learning to read and reproduce plant anatomy accurately) adds scientific rigour that is absent from most watercolour courses aimed at beginners, and is a genuine differentiator for learners interested in natural history illustration or botanical art as a professional genre. The Photoshop section is where real-world applicability breaks down for some learners: Photoshop is the dominant tool in commercial illustration workflows, but the section's pacing assumes prior familiarity that some beginners lack.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.