Adobe Illustrator: Graphic Design for Beginners vs The Beginner's Guide to Adobe After Effects
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 · Design
Adobe Illustrator: Graphic Design for Beginners
Skillshare · Design
The Beginner's Guide to Adobe After Effects
Per-criterion
Adobe Illustrator: Graphic Design for Beginners
The six-course Domestika Basics program covers Illustrator from interface setup through shapes, Pathfinder, Pen tool, type, colour theory and export workflows. Gilian Gomes's structured progression is consistently praised as logical and complete for absolute beginners. Capped because the curriculum, though thorough on tool basics, does not culminate in a single polished design brief and some UI elements in older lessons reflect earlier Illustrator versions.
Gilian Gomes has 15-plus years of professional design and branding experience with a degree in design and a postgraduate in branding from Porto Alegre, Brazil. Reviewers consistently describe him as didactic, methodical and genuinely enthusiastic about the tools he is teaching. The main friction is the Portuguese-language delivery requiring subtitles for non-Portuguese-speaking learners.
The course is priced at €9.90 (~$10-12 USD) with lifetime access — no subscription required. At that price point, Gomes's six-block Illustrator beginner course is among the most affordable structured design courses available from any credible instructor with real industry credentials. The optional Domestika Plus subscription adds discounts for multi-course learners.
The Domestika Basics format provides practical exercises at each block — shape construction, Pathfinder drills, type compositions, colour-mode experiments, export workflows — but does not produce a single end-to-end portfolio artefact like a logo, icon set or editorial spread. Learners who want a finished piece for their portfolio need a separate Domestika single-author course or a complementary Skillshare class on top of this one.
Working command of every core Illustrator subsystem — shapes, Pen, Pathfinder, type, colour and export — transfers cleanly into logo, icon, illustration and editorial vector work. The course teaches the tool rigorously; most graduates step up to Gomes's own advanced course or a niche project brief next. The limit is scope: it is Illustrator fluency, not design process.
The Beginner's Guide to Adobe After Effects
34 lessons across approximately 5 hours cover the After Effects workspace, composition, keyframing, masks, shape layers, text animation, and effects in a logical build. Reviewers consistently describe the progression as genuinely systematic — each lesson builds directly on the previous one rather than jumping between topics. The main gap is that the course ends where intermediate motion design begins; no expressions, no rigging.
Jake Bartlett has been teaching After Effects since 2013 and has 30+ courses on Skillshare. The dominant praise is that he explains *why* you are doing each step, not just the button sequence to press. Students consistently describe his instruction as gap-filling — knowledge they had been missing about AE falls into place quickly. Pacing is brisk but never rushed.
Covered under a standard Skillshare membership ($168/year or first month free trial). For the breadth and quality of 34 lessons of motion design instruction, the value-per-lesson under a membership is excellent. The caveat is that After Effects itself requires a separate Creative Cloud subscription ($55+/month), which is the real cost of learning the tool.
The single final project — a 'Taco Tuesday' arcade-style animation — is fun and motivating as a through-line. Reviewers enjoy completing it and find it a coherent showcase of the skills covered. It is, however, a playful exercise rather than a professional portfolio showpiece; its game-show aesthetic does not translate directly into a reel.
After Effects is the industry standard tool for motion graphics, broadcast, and digital content production. The foundational skills covered — layer animation, timing, masks, effects — transfer directly to real client work. Reviewers in motion design and video production describe the course skills as the exact foundation they use professionally. The gap is that the course does not reach expressions or templates, which are daily tools in professional AE workflows.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.