The Golden Secrets of Lettering vs Procreate for Beginners: Digital Illustration 101
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
The Golden Secrets of Lettering
Domestika · Creative Arts
Procreate for Beginners: Digital Illustration 101
Per-criterion
The Golden Secrets of Lettering is structured across five thematic units and fourteen lessons, covering a clear arc from conceptual foundations through hands-on sketch-making and into digital vectorisation. Unit 1 establishes what lettering is and where to find inspiration — a grounding section that sets the course apart from how-to tutorials that skip the "why." Unit 2 covers the bases of typography, the role of calligraphy in lettering, and hand-drawing technique, giving learners the conceptual vocabulary — letterform DNA, optical relationships, stroke contrast — that the rest of the curriculum builds on. Units 3 and 4 move into the practical core: developing first sketches, refining them into an advanced sketch, and then transitioning the analog artwork into a vector digital file using Adobe Illustrator. Unit 5 closes the loop with critical-eye work: printing, correcting and finalising colour. The curriculum's greatest strength is its coherence. Most lettering courses either focus purely on analog calligraphy-based drawing or purely on digital tools; Martina Flor's course integrates both in a logical sequence that reflects professional lettering workflow. The result is that learners come away not just knowing how to draw letters but understanding the cognitive process behind lettering design: how to observe typefaces with analytical eyes, how calligraphy underlies modern lettering, and how to develop a concept from first rough to finished vector artwork. The Nancy Wu Design review specifically praised this approach, noting the course "stresses the what and why before the how," producing "many 'aha' moments" for learners who had previously treated lettering as pure craft rather than design. The ceiling of the content is depth and runtime. At two hours total across fourteen lessons, the course averages under nine minutes per lesson — an extremely compact format for a discipline that is highly practice-intensive. Several learners in our sample noted that the course left them wanting more, describing it as an excellent overview but insufficient on its own for developing independent fluency. One reviewer wrote that it was "quite short" while acknowledging the teacher was great; another described it as "a good overview class for beginners" without the depth that intermediate learners need. The instructional density is high — every minute of video carries genuine content — but the total runtime places clear limits on how much hands-on technique can be demonstrated. The digital section, specifically the Adobe Illustrator vectorisation lessons in Unit 4, introduces a skills dependency that not all learners are prepared for. Illustrator is a professional-level vector drawing application with a steep learning curve. Several learners report being "completely lost" in the digital section because the instructor teaches Illustrator techniques at a pace appropriate for people who have used the software before. This creates a two-tier experience: learners who already know Illustrator find the digital-to-analog transition seamless and well-taught; learners who are new to Illustrator find the second half of the course inaccessible without supplementary instruction. The content itself is well-designed, but the assumed prior knowledge in Unit 4 is a genuine structural gap in an otherwise beginner-positioned course. Despite these limitations the content quality is meaningfully above the average for lettering courses at this price point. The combination of conceptual rigour (letterform analysis, calligraphic roots, typographic principles), practical analog skill-building (sketching technique, proportion refinement), and professional workflow (analog-to-digital transition, critical eye revision) gives learners a framework that transfers to any lettering project rather than teaching a single style or aesthetic. The thirteen downloadable resources and nine in-course exercises add structured reference material that extends the learning beyond the video runtime.
Martina Flor is one of the most credentialed lettering educators working today. Her formal training includes a graduate degree in Type and Media from the KABK Royal Academy of Arts in The Hague — one of the most selective type-design programs in the world — alongside earlier studies in communication design at Escola Elisava in Barcelona. She has operated a professional lettering studio in Berlin since 2010, producing commissioned work for clients including The Washington Post, Vanity Fair, Harper Collins, Penguin Random House, Adobe, Etsy, and Cosmopolitan. She is a four-time CommArts Typography Awards winner, a Print Magazine Type and Lettering Awards winner, a TEDx speaker, a TypeCon keynote speaker, and a jury member at ADC and LAD Awards. Her book The Golden Secrets of Lettering — the source text for this course — has sold more than 50,000 copies in six languages and is widely referred to in the lettering community as a foundational reference work. The credibility gap that plagues many online creative courses — instructors who teach what they have recently learned rather than what they have spent years practising — does not apply here. Martina Flor's portfolio demonstrates exactly the kind of sophisticated, client-ready lettering work the course teaches toward. When she explains how to develop a lettering concept for a commissioned postcard, the examples and the judgements she makes during the critical-eye revision section are grounded in real professional experience. Multiple learners in our sample noted that her teaching "transmits passion for the craft" and reflects the confidence of someone who has solved the problems she is describing. Her teaching clarity is the most consistently praised quality in the Domestika review archive. Across our 20-item official-source sample, learners in Spanish, English, Portuguese and French all described her explanations as "very clear," "simple," "easy to follow," and "directly to the point." The course received a 98% positive rating across more than 1,000 reviews — a figure that, for a course with this level of conceptual ambition, is exceptional. One English- language reviewer summarised the instructor effect concisely: "Martina is an excellent teacher." Another wrote: "Martina explains her process in easy to follow and adapt steps." A third, who identified herself as someone who had already taken other Domestika courses by Martina Flor, noted that this was her "third Domestika course" with the instructor — implying a level of learner loyalty that goes beyond a single positive experience. The one instructional gap — the Illustrator section's assumed prior knowledge — is a design choice rather than a teaching quality problem. Flor demonstrates the Illustrator techniques clearly and at a professional pace; the issue is pace calibration for absolute beginners to the software rather than unclear instruction. For learners who arrive with intermediate Illustrator experience, the teaching quality in the digital section is consistently described as excellent. For learners who do not, a supplementary Illustrator basics course resolves the gap. Flor's own teaching philosophy, visible in the course and in her broader educational platform, emphasises understanding principles over following tutorials — a framing that more advanced learners describe as elevating the course above conventional "copy what I do" instruction.
Domestika prices individual courses at varying rates, with promotional sale prices typically ranging from $9.99 to $32.99 for most courses. The Golden Secrets of Lettering is listed at $32.99 at standard pricing. Domestika runs frequent platform-wide promotional events — several times per year — during which courses typically drop significantly. All purchases on Domestika include lifetime access to the course video, downloadable resources, and a completion certificate. There is no recurring subscription required for individual course purchases, though Domestika's Plus membership tier offers credits and discounts across the catalogue for regular buyers. At the sale price point, the value proposition is strong. Fourteen lessons of genuinely substantive lettering instruction from one of the discipline's most credentialled educators, with thirteen downloadable resources, nine structured exercises, and a final project that produces a portfolio-ready personalized postcard design — all with lifetime access — represents more value than most beginner lettering courses available at comparable price points. The course is built on the content of Martina Flor's bestselling book The Golden Secrets of Lettering (sold separately for $25–$30 in print), which makes the Domestika course a video-and-practice companion to a reference work many learners already own or intend to purchase. The primary value limitation is runtime. At two hours total, this is a short course compared to other Domestika offerings, and learners who evaluate value in terms of hours-of-content-per-dollar will find it less favourable than longer courses at similar price points. However, evaluating lettering instruction purely by runtime misses the point: the course is designed to teach a workflow and conceptual framework, not to fill hours with technique demonstrations. The Nancy Wu Design reviewer made this case clearly: the course's emphasis on "the what and why before the how" produces a form of value — conceptual understanding that persists past the completion of the exercises — that pure technique videos do not. For learners who intend to take lettering seriously — whether as a freelance skill, a commercial art practice, or a serious hobby — the combination of Martina Flor's professional credibility, the course's conceptual depth, the analog-to-digital workflow coverage, and the book-companion positioning makes this a high-value entry point into the discipline. At the standard $32.99 list price the value is acceptable but not exceptional; at sale price ($9.99–$19.99) it is an easy recommendation for anyone with genuine interest in lettering design as a craft rather than as a quick aesthetic skill.
The course's final project is a personalised postcard design developed from scratch across Units 3, 4 and 5 — concept development, first sketches, advanced sketch refinement, digital vectorisation, and final colour and completion. This is a well-chosen project brief for a lettering course: it is open enough to allow genuine personalisation (learners choose their own word or phrase and develop their own typographic concept), constrained enough to provide a clear finish line, and practically applicable enough to have real-world use beyond the course. The postcard format has a long history in lettering design and is the kind of commission format that beginner lettering artists are likely to encounter early in commercial work. The projects gallery on Domestika shows the range of outcomes learners have produced: greeting cards and festive postcards (including Christmas and holiday designs), city-themed pieces (a Konya City Postcard, for example), decorative signs with illustrated lettering, event announcement pieces (a Pool Party announcement, a theater play logo), and more personal or expressive pieces exploring emotion through letterform design. The breadth of outcomes across the 20,000-plus enrolled students is testament to the course's openness to personal expression within the postcard framework — learners are not copying Martina Flor's demo but developing their own lettering concept with her process as the scaffold. The quality ceiling of the project work is constrained by the course's beginner level and two-hour runtime. The projects learners produce are genuine lettering compositions — not just traced letterforms or typed text — but they reflect a first attempt at the full analog-to-digital lettering workflow rather than a polished portfolio piece. The analog sketch stage tends to produce loose, expressive letterforms; the digital stage, particularly for learners less experienced with Illustrator, can produce vector artwork that lacks the refinement of the hand-drawn original. This is not unique to this course — it is the fundamental challenge of the analog-to-digital transition in lettering — but it means the project output is better understood as a learning artifact than a portfolio showcase. The community engagement around the Domestika projects tab is active: submitted projects receive hundreds of views and dozens of comments, creating a social feedback layer that partially compensates for the absence of instructor critique. Projects with particularly strong analog sketches or distinctive typographic concepts tend to surface prominently in the gallery, giving learners a benchmark for quality within the course's output. For learners who want to develop toward client-ready lettering projects, the postcard final project provides a useful proof of concept — a completed piece that demonstrates the full workflow — even if it requires further practice and iteration before it reaches commercial quality.
The skills taught in The Golden Secrets of Lettering map directly to real-world lettering practice in a way that many beginner courses do not. The emphasis on understanding letterform DNA — the structural logic of how letters are constructed, the optical relationships between strokes, the role of calligraphic movement in contemporary lettering — gives learners a transferable analytical framework that applies to any lettering project, not just the postcard brief developed in the course. Flor's teaching philosophy, explicitly articulated in the course and in her book, is that lettering artists who understand why letterforms look the way they do can adapt and invent; those who only know how to copy cannot. The analog-to-digital workflow covered in Units 3 and 4 reflects the actual production process used by professional lettering artists. Clients typically commission lettering in vector format — scalable, editable, usable in print and digital contexts — and the course teaches exactly this: how to develop a hand-drawn lettering concept and translate it into a production-ready vector file. This is genuinely useful knowledge for anyone pursuing lettering commissions, whether for editorial illustration (magazines, book covers), branding and logo design, packaging, or event design. The postcard brief is a simplified version of real client work, and the skills developed in completing it — concept development, sketch iteration, digital refinement, critical-eye revision — are the same skills used in professional lettering projects at any scale. Martina Flor's own career demonstrates the professional trajectory the course points toward: starting from a graphic design background, developing a specialised lettering practice, and building a client base across editorial, publishing and brand categories. The teaching in the course reflects this trajectory — it is not positioned as a hobby activity but as a professional craft with real commercial applications. Several learners in our sample noted that the course helped them structure their lettering workflow and understand how to develop from concept to finished piece in a way that felt applicable to real design briefs rather than just practice exercises. The real-world applicability limit is the Illustrator dependency. For learners who work in other vector tools (Affinity Designer, Inkscape, CorelDRAW) or who work primarily in analog lettering without digital vectorisation, the digital section of the course is less directly applicable. However, the conceptual and analog portions of the course — the letterform analysis, the observation exercises, the sketch development process, the critical-eye revision framework — are tool-agnostic and applicable regardless of the software a learner ultimately uses. The core intellectual content of the course — how to think about lettering design — is among the most practically applicable content in the Domestika lettering catalogue.
Thirty-seven lessons across four hours and six minutes cover the full Procreate feature set in a logical seven-part sequence: app essentials, interface customisation, mark-making and the brush library, layer management and blend modes, selection and transformation tools, colour and opacity adjustments, and finally exporting work and recording timelapse animations. The architecture is thorough and well-paced for a first encounter with the app. Each of the seven course units ends with a dedicated Practical Phase segment that consolidates the preceding lessons, which is the right curriculum design for software-based instruction. The honest limit of the content is depth over breadth: the course teaches every major Procreate tool competently, but because it is structured as a software-orientation Basics course rather than a project-led illustration course, there is no single extended illustration project that guides learners from concept to finished piece. A learner who finishes the course will know Procreate fluently; they will not automatically know what to draw with it. Learners who want creative direction alongside tool instruction should follow this with Brad Woodard's own Analog-Style Digital Illustration course or another Domestika illustration course to apply the toolkit.
Brad Woodard is the course's consistent dominant positive across every source in our sample. He is the co-founder of Brave the Woods, a commercial illustration studio that has worked for Ford, Microsoft, Target, Coca-Cola, Penguin Random House, USPS, and eBay — clients that represent the full range of professional digital illustration work. He holds a BFA in graphic design from Brigham Young University and has 160,000 followers on Domestika. His teaching approach is described across sources as clear, precise, and charismatic: students in the Domestika review archive use phrases like "explains very well," "easy to follow and understand," and "brings charisma to lessons." The Designest review noted that his professional design experience informs the instruction in practical ways — tips and shortcuts are presented alongside context for why they matter in real illustration work, rather than as isolated feature demonstrations. The one mild criticism that surfaces occasionally is that the instruction pace is occasionally brisk: a small number of learners note that Brad moves through some gestures and menu options quickly enough that absolute beginners needed to pause and rewatch to keep up. On balance the instruction quality is among the highest in Domestika's illustration catalogue.
Domestika Basics courses — of which this is one — are priced lower than standard Domestika courses. Depending on the promotion cycle, the course runs from roughly $9.99 to $59.99 on a one-time purchase basis, with lifetime access, a certificate of completion, and 25 additional downloadable resources included. At the $9.99 to $19 sale price point — which Domestika reaches several times per year across its promotional calendar — four-plus hours of structured Procreate instruction from a professional commercial illustrator with 114,000 enrolled students represents excellent value. The one-time purchase model is a clear advantage over Skillshare's monthly subscription for learners who want to learn one specific software tool and return to the lessons over time. The practical cost context is that Procreate itself is a one-time $12.99 purchase on the App Store, and an Apple Pencil and iPad are required hardware — the course assumes you have these. Learners who are buying hardware for the first time should factor in total setup cost when evaluating overall value, though the course itself is very affordable relative to the tool mastery it delivers.
Each of the seven units ends with a Practical Phase exercise, and the final unit covers exporting artwork and recording timelapse videos of the creative process. The Practical Phase segments are the course's primary portfolio output mechanism, but they are technique reinforcement exercises rather than complete illustration projects. A learner who completes the full course will have practised every major Procreate feature and will have a series of exercise files demonstrating competency — but will not have a single finished, portfolio-ready illustration to show from the course itself. The Domestika projects gallery for this course reflects this: submitted projects are predominantly feature demonstrations and brush explorations rather than complete compositional illustrations. This is the most significant honest limitation of the course for learners whose goal is to build a digital illustration portfolio. Reviewers on Learnopoly and Courselounge note the same constraint: the course is best characterised as tool-fluency training rather than illustration-project training. Brad Woodard's separate Analog-Style Digital Illustration course addresses this gap directly and is the natural next step for learners who finish this Basics course.
Procreate is the dominant professional digital illustration app for iPad-based artists. Learning it fluently — which is what this course delivers — is directly applicable to commercial illustration, character design, editorial illustration, product branding, and surface pattern design. The specific tools covered (brush library, blend modes, layers, masks, selection tools, transformations, colour adjustments, export options) are the exact toolkit that working illustrators use on client projects. Brad Woodard's professional context is embedded in the instruction: he draws on his studio's client work with Ford, Microsoft, and Target to contextualise how specific features are applied in real deliverables. The animation and timelapse export instruction also has immediate real-world utility — sharing timelapse process videos on social media is a standard client-acquisition tool for working illustrators. The one real-world gap is that Procreate is iPad-exclusive; learners who work primarily on desktop or Windows will not be able to apply any of this instruction without an iPad and Apple Pencil.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.