Macramé: Basic and Complex Knots vs Drawing for Beginners Level -1
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Mariella Motilla (Domestika) · Creative Arts
Macramé: Basic and Complex Knots
Domestika · Creative Arts
Drawing for Beginners Level -1
Per-criterion
Twelve lessons across four units deliver a focused beginner curriculum: Unit 1 (Introduction) covers Mariella's influences and design philosophy; Unit 2 (First Steps) addresses materials, basic knots, and complex knots; Unit 3 (Let's Do It) walks through designing, rigging, and constructing a full wall hanging — including the upper strips and braid, lower triangle of flowers, and San Agustín finishing knot; Unit 4 rounds out with basic care and alternative applications. At one hour and fifteen minutes across twelve lessons, the course is compact and project-driven, which beginners consistently praise as achievable. The ceiling is scope: experienced makers who arrive expecting advanced or rare techniques note that the knots labelled "complex" are widely familiar in the macramé community, and the single-project output (a 90 × 120 cm wall hanging) leaves learners wanting more varied applications. Thirteen downloadable resources and ten exercises extend the effective learning time beyond the runtime.
Mariella Motilla is a textile designer from León, Guanajuato, Mexico, who studied at Instituto Europeo di Design in Barcelona and Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City. With 24 courses and 85,000-plus followers on Domestika, her teaching reputation is built on a calm, step-by-step style that multiple reviewers describe as easy to follow and confidence-building for first-time makers. The minority critique in the sample is about pacing: a handful of learners note that she talks through some sections quickly and that hand positioning occasionally obscures the stitch being demonstrated — a concrete usability issue in a craft where hand placement matters. One reviewer noted that "complex" knots were not genuinely advanced, suggesting the course title sets expectations that experienced crafters may find slightly overstated.
Domestika lists this course at $33.99 with frequent promotional pricing as low as $0.89 during Plus trial offers. At typical sale prices of $10–$20, the combination of lifetime access, 13 downloadable resources, 10 exercises, community forum access, and a signed completion certificate represents strong value for a beginner entry point into macramé. The platform's subscription upsell practices (auto-enrolment in a 30-day Plus trial that renews at $129.99/year unless cancelled) are a recurring complaint across Trustpilot and should be noted — the course content itself is priced fairly, but learners should cancel the trial promptly if they do not want the subscription.
Domestika provides a community forum for each course where students can post project photos and questions, and Mariella is noted as engaged enough to comment on student work. However, Domestika's broader customer service reputation is poor (a 1.7-star Trustpilot rating largely driven by billing complaints), and instructor response times in course forums vary. There is no live component, office hours, or real-time feedback mechanism, which is standard for Domestika's self-paced model but leaves learners who get stuck on a specific knot without immediate guidance.
Macramé is a genuinely portable and marketable craft skill. Students completing this course can produce decorative wall hangings, tapestries, and with the knot vocabulary acquired, extend into plant hangers, accessories, and small home goods. Multiple reviewers confirmed they created finished pieces immediately after the course and went on to explore further projects independently. One reviewer from a textile industry background noted the material calculation lessons as practically valuable. The single-project format means some learners need to seek out additional courses or YouTube tutorials to diversify beyond wall hangings.
The curriculum unfolds across four units and 18 lessons in 3 hours and 18 minutes — unusually generous for a Domestika beginner course. Unit 1 (Introduction) frames the "why draw?" question and establishes the notebook as a creative garden of ideas and memories, setting a philosophical tone that distinguishes the curriculum from purely technical instruction. Unit 2 (Proto-drawing) is the course's most original section: it opens with hand-drawing as a free observational model, progresses through two dedicated doodling lessons, covers cellophane collages as a texture and mark-making exercise, and concludes with group proto-drawing games. This proto-drawing sequence — activities that build drawing confidence without demanding representational accuracy — is rare in beginner illustration curricula and is consistently cited by reviewers as a key differentiator. Unit 3 (Basic Notions) moves from freedom toward structure: geometric shapes are introduced as compositional building blocks across two lessons, one lesson covers emotional observation ("how does a lemon feel?"), one applies prosopography and ethopoeia to descriptive drawing of people and things, and a group game closes the unit. Unit 4 (Now, Let's Draw!) introduces productive constraints and challenges to spark creative problem-solving, then dedicates two lessons to urban sketching, one to drawing people, and closes with group exercises. The final project synthesises all four units into a personal sketchbook that the student records and shares online. The curriculum's main limitation is that 18 lessons across just over three hours means that individual lessons average around eleven minutes — enough to introduce and demonstrate each idea, but not enough for the kind of extended practice repetition that hands-on technique mastery requires. The course explicitly designs around this by positioning the exercises, the sketchbook habit, and the peer community as the extended practice layer. For learners who engage with all three, the content depth is substantially greater than the video runtime suggests.
Puño (José Ramón Sánchez) has been a professional illustrator since 1994 and began his career as an educator just three years later, specialising in creativity, illustration, and graphic storytelling. He has lived and worked in Coruña, Paris, Amsterdam, and Medellín, developing his practice across advertising, press (including El País, El Mundo, and Público), animation, children's and adult book illustration, and comics. He directed the One Year Illustration programme at the Istituto Europeo di Design in Madrid — one of Europe's most respected design schools — and also directed the publishing houses Ediciones Peo and Ultrarradio. His awards include the 2018 Barco de Vapor Award for his novel "La Niña Invisible," the 2009 Fundación SM International Illustration Award for "¡Ñam!," First Prize at CreaCómic from CAM (2009), First Prize at Cinemad Photography (2008), and Third Prize at Nontzeflash Animation (2006). With nearly 550,000 combined enrollments across six Domestika courses — all rated as bestsellers — he is among the platform's most trusted illustration instructors. Across our sample the adjectives reviewers use to describe his teaching are remarkably consistent: "reassuring," "inspiring," "clear," "warm," "motivating," "playful," "genial." Multiple learners explicitly state that they had tried and failed to teach themselves drawing before this course and that Puño's teaching was what finally unlocked the habit. His on-camera personality is the instructional mechanism here — the rational playfulness of the curriculum is inseparable from the personality of the teacher delivering it. This is difficult to replicate and very difficult to fake, and the 99% positive rating across more than 10,000 official reviews is its strongest independent validation.
Domestika lists individual courses at $29.99 USD, with a Plus subscription option at around $27/month (billed annually). In practice, Domestika runs frequent promotional sales — particularly a regularly offered first-month trial that brings the entry price well below list — meaning most learners access the course at $10 to $15 or less. At that price point, 3 hours 18 minutes of structured video instruction from a professional illustrator with 30 years of practice and a track record of teaching at IED Madrid, plus 15 additional resources (including 9 downloadable files), a final project framework, lifetime access, and availability in multiple audio languages and 8 subtitle languages, represents exceptional value. The materials list is deliberately low-barrier: a notebook, pencils, coloured markers, a ruler, geometric templates, adhesive tape, and magazines. Optional items — printer, brushes, watercolours — are not required for the core curriculum. This is not a course that gates progress behind an expensive materials purchase. With 274,908 enrolled students and 10,479+ official reviews, the scale of the audience demonstrates that the course's value proposition has been validated by a very large number of paying learners. The one value consideration worth noting is that the course's philosophy foregrounds creative exploration over technical output — learners expecting a traditional "how to draw X" step-by-step programme should review the curriculum before purchasing, as the proto-drawing approach is a different kind of value than technique-first instruction.
The final project for Drawing for Beginners Level -1 is a personal sketchbook: the student assembles, practises, and records the exercises and drawings developed throughout the course into a coherent notebook, then films or photographs it to share online. This is an unusual and well-chosen project format for a beginner course. Rather than asking learners to produce a single polished illustration — which can feel high-stakes and paralysing for absolute beginners — the sketchbook project captures a process and a collection, lowering the anxiety threshold while still requiring synthesis and commitment. The project format also reflects the course's core argument: that drawing is a habit and a personal visual diary, not a performance. Students who complete the sketchbook project walk away with a tangible creative object that represents their development across the course, which has genuine portfolio-as-process value even if it is not a commercial illustration brief. The course projects gallery on Domestika is active and shows a wide range of outputs — from hesitant first marks to confident observational sketches — which provides useful calibration for learners at different starting points. The limitation is that the sketchbook format is more open-ended than a directed project: learners who thrive with a specific, bounded brief ("draw this exact scene") may find the project's freedom less scaffolded than they need. Domestika does not provide individual instructor feedback on submitted projects, which is standard for the platform at this scale; the peer community gallery provides social reference but not directed critique.
The skills Puño teaches in Drawing for Beginners Level -1 are foundational in the most literal sense: doodling as a mark-making and ideation practice, geometric shapes as compositional building blocks, observation drawing (the hand as model), urban sketching, and figure drawing are all transferable to every visual discipline — illustration, graphic design, storyboarding, concept art, comics, journaling, and visual note-taking. The course's approach to drawing as a tool for thought and memory, not just aesthetic output, is directly applicable to professional contexts where visual communication is valued: design thinking workshops, editorial illustration, children's education, and creative direction all draw on the same foundational vocabulary. Multiple reviewers describe applying the sketchbook habit immediately to their daily life — carrying a notebook, sketching on commutes, drawing their environment — which is the most direct form of real-world applicability: a changed creative behaviour, not just a completed course. The proto-drawing exercises (doodling, group games, cellophane collages) are specifically noted by workshop facilitators and teachers in our sample as material they have directly adapted for use with their own students and participants. The course's limitation on this dimension is that it does not teach technical rendering — perspective, accurate proportion, shading systems — which means learners who want to immediately produce polished representational drawings will need to supplement this course with technique-focused instruction after building the foundational confidence and habit that Puño's curriculum delivers.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.