The Golden Secrets of Lettering vs Photography Basics and Beyond: From Smartphone to DSLR
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
Coursera · Creative Arts
Photography Basics and Beyond: From Smartphone to DSLR
Per-criterion
Fourteen lessons across two hours cover the full analogue-to-digital workflow: observation and typographic analysis, calligraphy fundamentals, hand-sketching with pencil and tracing paper, vectorisation in Adobe Illustrator, and final colour refinement. The sequencing is logical and each lesson builds directly on the previous one, making the course easy to follow in a single sitting. The honest constraint is depth: at two hours the course qualifies as a solid introduction rather than a comprehensive programme, and several reviewers noted that the Adobe Illustrator vectorisation segment assumes prior software familiarity that genuine beginners may not have. One student on page six of the Domestika review archive described feeling "completely lost when she got to the Illustrator part" because the digitisation workflow was taught at a pace suited to existing users rather than newcomers. The analogue sketching and observation sections are uniformly praised for depth; the digital back half is where the curriculum shows its limits.
Martina Flor is a Buenos Aires-born lettering artist and designer based in Berlin whose client list includes The Washington Post, Vanity Fair, Cosmopolitan, HarperCollins, Monotype, and Etsy. She is also the author of the book The Golden Secrets of Lettering, published by Princeton Architectural Press, giving the course a natural companion in print. Across every page of the Domestika review archive, Martina's instruction quality is the single most praised element of the course: students describe her as "brilliant," "excellent," "very didactic," and someone who "transmits passion for the craft." Independent blogger Nancy Wu of Nancy Wu Design praised her emphasis on "learning and understanding first before developing execution," noting that the instruction builds genuine craft thinking rather than just procedural steps. The rare mild criticism is about pacing in the software section, not about Martina's expertise or communication style, which reviewers across multiple languages consistently rate as outstanding.
Domestika courses are sold on a one-time purchase basis with permanent access, and The Golden Secrets of Lettering typically sits in the $10–$20 range during Domestika's frequent promotional windows. At that price, fourteen lessons and thirteen downloadable resources — including reference materials and the final project brief — represent solid value for a structured beginner introduction. The course does not require expensive materials: pencils, tracing paper, and Adobe Illustrator (or a free trial) cover the full workflow. Where the value calculus becomes complicated is for students who complete the two hours and want to continue: the course is best understood as a gateway to Martina's other Domestika offerings rather than a standalone comprehensive programme, so learners who plan to go deeper should factor in the eventual cost of follow-up courses.
The course's final project — designing a personalised lettering postcard from initial sketch through to finished digital vector — is a genuine professional task that mirrors the workflow used in commercial lettering commissions. Martina's instruction explicitly connects analogue observation and sketching habits to professional output, teaching students to look at lettering in the environment, analyse what makes it effective, and then replicate that thinking in their own work. Reviewers repeatedly noted that the observation and analysis exercises gave them transferable skills they apply beyond the course itself. The limitation is that two hours of instruction and a single postcard project do not provide enough repetition to build fluency: students who want to work professionally in lettering will need the follow-up courses (Lettering for Perfectionists, Cursive Lettering for Logos) to develop the range of skills required for client work.
Domestika provides a community forum attached to each course where students can post questions and share project work for peer feedback. The course page explicitly states that students can interact with Martina and other community members in the forum, and Martina encourages learners to upload sketches for community feedback as part of the learning process. In practice, instructor responsiveness on Domestika forums is inconsistent across the platform: the community is active and other students often answer questions, but dedicated one-on-one instructor replies are not guaranteed. At the platform level, multiple independent reviewers noted that Domestika's customer support offers no live chat or phone contact, relying on email only, and Trustpilot feedback about the platform broadly flags slow or generic support responses. These are platform-wide issues rather than specific to this course, but they affect the overall support experience a learner should expect.
Across five courses the fundamentals — exposure, the ISO/shutter/aperture triangle, depth of field, composition, light and basic Lightroom — are taught clearly and at a beginner-friendly pace. Glendinning and Sullivan are repeatedly praised for thoroughness. Capped because several reviewers flag the Lightroom and smartphone sections as dated, and courses 3-4 as padded with off-topic chatter.
Professors Peter Glendinning and Mark Sullivan are the most-cited strength in the first four courses — "thorough", "great advice", "easy to follow". The score is held back by a recurring complaint that the instructors are absent from the discussion forums and never personally critique work, most acutely in the capstone where they "make only token appearances".
Free to audit; ~$49/month subscription for graded assignments and the Michigan State certificate, completable in roughly two to three months. Strong value for a university-backed beginner curriculum. Capped because the capstone month adds little new content for the same monthly fee and a minority called the production quality "not worth the price".
Real shooting assignments, a web gallery and a portfolio-building capstone give learners genuine practice and shareable work. But project quality is bottlenecked by peer grading: many reviewers report superficial one-word critiques, plagiarised submissions, bot accounts and slow turnaround, which undermines the feedback loop the projects depend on.
Multiple learners report going from "knowing nothing" to confident shooting, selling prints, or switching toward photography seriously. The exposure and composition fundamentals transfer directly to any camera. Limited by the absence of business-of-photography content and by post-production teaching that lags current Lightroom versions.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.