Botanical Watercolor: Illustrating Art and Science vs Fundamentals of Music Theory
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Domestika · Creative Arts
Botanical Watercolor: Illustrating Art and Science
Coursera · Creative Arts
Fundamentals of Music Theory
Per-criterion
Fifteen lessons across four units and a final project cover the full arc from materials selection through colour mixing, texture painting, a complete fruit portrait painted in layers, and finishing / framing considerations. The colour mixing unit — showing how a broad palette can be built from primaries alone — is the section reviewers praise most specifically. The texture painting lesson is also consistently cited as genuinely instructive rather than cursory. The honest ceiling is scope: at two hours and forty-seven minutes with a single finished subject (fruit), the course is purposefully narrow. Learners wanting a series of botanical subjects, foliage-specific instruction, or composition theory beyond the final framing lesson will need to look beyond this course. Twenty-four downloadable resources and twelve exercises substantially extend the effective learning time beyond what the video runtime implies.
Julia Trickey holds four Royal Horticultural Society Gold Medals (2006, 2008, 2012, 2013), has illustrated sixteen Royal Mail stamps, and is a Fellow of the Chelsea Physic Garden Florilegium Society. That level of credential is rare in online art education, and reviewers across our sample register it explicitly — describing the course as "an amazing opportunity" to learn from someone of her standing. Her teaching style is described repeatedly and consistently as calm, slow-paced, clear, and technically authoritative. Multiple reviewers specifically praise her spoken instruction — the clarity of her vocabulary and the unhurried pace of her demonstrations — as the quality that separates her from other botanical illustration instructors on the platform. No negative observations about the instructor appear anywhere in our sample.
Domestika prices individual courses between $10 and $40 during its frequent promotional sales, with lifetime access, twenty-four downloadable resources, twelve exercises, and a community forum included. For access to a four-time RHS Gold Medal winner's technique — colour mixing from primaries, layered fruit portraits, masking fluid, texture work — at sale price, the value proposition is strong. The main caveat is the platform's widely documented subscription upsell: buying a low-price course triggers a Domestika Plus free trial that auto-renews annually unless cancelled, a pattern that has generated substantial complaints on Trustpilot and PissedConsumer. The course content itself represents strong value; the billing environment around it warrants attention.
The final project is a complete botanical watercolour fruit portrait painted from observation or a reference photograph, from pencil sketch through masking fluid, initial layers, texture addition, background work, and finishing touches. This is a genuine completed piece — not a technique exercise — and the unit structure (separate lessons for Initial Layers 1 and 2, Adding Textures, Finishing Touches, and Background Work) reflects a careful step-by-step build rather than a demonstration students observe from the outside. The course also includes a Unit 4 lesson on composition ideas, giving learners framing vocabulary for displaying the finished work. The limit is that the curriculum produces one finished subject; learners wanting a portfolio of multiple botanical pieces will need additional courses or independent practice.
Botanical watercolour as a discipline has clear real-world applications in natural history illustration, botanical publishing, gallery work, and print sales — and Julia Trickey's own career demonstrates all of these. The course's colour mixing from primaries is a genuinely transferable skill: understanding how to build any colour from red, yellow and blue reduces dependency on a large tube palette and is directly applicable to all botanical subjects beyond the course's fruit focus. The masking fluid and texture techniques taught are standard professional tools. The framing and composition lesson adds a practical finishing dimension. The main real-world limit is that the course addresses fruit specifically; learners interested in flowers, foliage, or full botanical compositions will need to apply and extend the techniques independently.
Six modules take you from pitches, scales and modes through intervals, clefs, rhythm and form into two full weeks of functional harmony and a harmonic-analysis final. Revised in 2022. Reviewers consistently praise the clarity and the bite-sized video chunks. Capped because the taught material is thin relative to the difficulty of the quizzes in the later weeks.
Five University of Edinburgh academics — Dr Thomas Butler, Dr John Kitchen MBE, Dr Zack Moir and colleagues — deliver genuinely academic, well-paced lectures. The teaching is the most consistently praised element across the corpus. The variety of voices keeps it fresh, though it makes the level of assumed knowledge uneven from week to week.
Free to audit in full; a certificate is ~$49 (or ~£35) and is included in a Coursera Plus subscription with financial aid available. For a six-module university-grade music-theory course with an open-access companion e-book, the free-audit route is hard to beat on price.
Assessment is quiz- and exam-based rather than creative-project-based — weekly graded quizzes plus a harmonic-analysis final. Good for testing recall and analysis, but there is no composition portfolio or peer-reviewed creative artefact. The exams are the most divisive element, with several learners flagging notation and clef demands that exceed the taught content.
The notation, harmony and analysis skills transfer directly to reading scores, arranging, songwriting and further academic study — Edinburgh positions it as a foundation for musicology, composition and performance. Limit is that it is Western-notation theory, not ear training, production or instrument technique, so it is one pillar of musicianship rather than all of it.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.