Realistic Portrait with Graphite Pencil vs Drawing Appealing Characters with Personality
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
Realistic Portrait with Graphite Pencil
Domestika · Creative Arts
Drawing Appealing Characters with Personality
Per-criterion
At 35 lessons across 9 hours 30 minutes, this is one of the most substantial portrait drawing curricula available on Domestika. The structure moves logically from art-historical context (evolution and types of portrait) through a rigorous technical sequence: academic drawing concepts, facial proportions, skull and shoulder osteology, 3D structure analysis, surface anatomy, shadow mapping, the physics of light, modelling, and multi-part texturing and finishing lessons. The depth is genuinely unusual for a platform that frequently packages beginner courses at under three hours. The main limitation, noted by several reviewers, is that the introductory and historical units (Units 1 and 2) feel lengthy relative to their instructional yield — one French reviewer specifically called the early units "longues avec peu de contenu" before praising Unit 3 as excellent. Learners seeking expressive or gestural portraiture will also find the curriculum narrowly academic in focus; it teaches classical observational realism, not looser or more illustrative approaches.
Diego Catalan Amilivia holds a degree in Fine Arts from the University of Salamanca (specialising in painting, 1996–2001) and completed postgraduate studies at the Art Students League and the National Academy of Design in New York City (2002–2008), where he studied realistic painting, drawing, and portraiture under Andrew Reiss and Harvey Dinnerstein — two instructors in the classical realist lineage. He subsequently taught figure drawing and artistic anatomy for over a decade at the Escuela Superior de Dibujo Profesional (ESDIP) in Madrid, one of Spain's most respected professional drawing schools, and now runs his own academy, Estudio Nigredo, focused on life drawing and classical painting. Reviewers consistently describe his explanations as "muy detallista" (very detailed), "claras y útiles" (clear and useful), and technically rigorous. He has 370,000+ followers on Domestika and 13 published courses. The one consistent criticism is that some learners find his pacing slow and his theoretical explanations occasionally more extensive than necessary, but this is the same quality — thoroughness — that the majority of reviewers praise.
At Domestika's typical promotional price of $10–$15 (individual courses are listed at $49.99 but go on sale frequently), 9 hours 30 minutes of structured instruction from a Fine Arts graduate with New York Academy postgraduate training, a decade of professional anatomy teaching, and 27 additional downloadable resources represents exceptional value. One student noted it would have taken them "a year reading books" to access equivalent information; that framing is hyperbolic but captures a real sentiment in the review base. The course includes lifetime access across self-paced online delivery, subtitles in 8 languages, and audio dubbing in six languages (Spanish, English, French, Italian, Portuguese, Turkish). The materials required — graphite pencils, paper, and a photographic reference — are inexpensive and accessible. The course does not require specialist supplies or significant up-front materials investment.
The final project — a complete realistic portrait from a photographic reference, drawn in graphite pencil — is a genuinely demanding, portfolio-quality output. The Domestika projects gallery for this course shows a wide range of completed portraits, including technically ambitious renderings of public figures (one student posted a graphite portrait of Robert De Niro; another a reproduction of the Mona Lisa in pencil), demonstrating that the course's technical curriculum translates into real skill development across a wide ability range. The project is more demanding than the sketchbook or quick-sketch projects typical of beginner-level Domestika courses, and the 9.5-hour curriculum earns that ambition. The limitation is that Domestika provides no individual instructor feedback on submitted projects — the peer gallery is the only feedback mechanism — which means learners working through complex modelling and texturing decisions do so without directed critique.
Portrait drawing in graphite pencil is a foundational fine-art skill with direct applications in traditional illustration, concept art, character design, classical painting preparation, and life drawing practice. The anatomy content — skull and shoulder osteology, facial muscle mapping, 3D structure analysis — is transferable to any representational discipline. Multiple reviewers describe meaningfully improving their ability to draw faces from reference, which is a directly applicable skill. The course is narrowly focused on classical academic realism, meaning its techniques are highly relevant to learners pursuing traditional fine art or representational illustration, and less immediately applicable to stylised, digital, or abstract creative work. Diego's methodology — construction drawing, shadow mapping, value modelling — is the same systematic approach used in professional atelier training, which lends the course genuine real-world credibility beyond the platform context.
Across 18 lessons and roughly 3 hours 48 minutes, the course walks the full Magdalina Dianova workflow — from early exploration sketches through anatomy, facial features, clothing, colour and a final character sheet — with very little filler. Independent reviewer Richard Butler (Animation Juice) rated it 9.4/10 and wrote "there are over 3 hours of content here and very little of it is filler," while Teoh Yi Chie (Parka Blogs) noted the illustrated examples "all look great" and the reference-photo approach grounds the process in observation before imagination. The one structural gap reviewers flag is that the pose-cleanup process is omitted from the posing unit, leaving some learners to work that step out alone.
Magdalina Dianova's backstory — self-taught, DreamWorks TV freelance client, Venice Film Festival short — is cited across multiple reviews as genuinely inspiring rather than marketing noise. Parka Blogs called her journey "quite inspiring" and noted she communicates progression is achievable, while Animation Juice praised the split-screen filming that shows both the unobscured canvas and her drawing gestures simultaneously, calling it "really useful." Domestika learners repeatedly highlight clarity: "La explicación es muy clara" and "Nice and simple course with straightforward instructions." The only consistent instructor-level criticism is the omission of the cleanup step during pose work.
The course is a Domestika bestseller typically priced around $12–15 on sale (listed at ~$19 but almost always discounted). For that price you get nearly four hours of professionally filmed instruction, downloadable resources, and lifetime access. Animation Juice summarised the consensus well: "Considering the amount of content, this is an incredible price." No reviewer flagged value as a problem; the only pricing note relates to Domestika's platform-level subscription auto-renewal practices, which are not specific to this course.
The final project — a multi-pose character sheet with outfit and colour variations — produces real portfolio output that learners can point to. Richard Butler described his completed designs as "some of my most accomplished drawings EVER," and the Domestika project gallery shows consistent, diverse character designs from thousands of students. The minor limitation is that all course demonstrations use female characters, which leaves learners who want to practice male character design without guided reference work in that direction.
The concepts — anatomy construction, colour scheme exploration, conveying character through clothing and posture — are transferable across any illustration software or even traditional media. Parka Blogs confirmed the techniques apply beyond Procreate/iPad. Lily Holt (@monster_girl) credited it with helping her escape a "style rut," which speaks to its applicability as a refresher even for artists with existing skills. The Procreate-specific tool tips (canvas sizes, brush settings, shortcuts) are a narrower bonus rather than the core, so the course holds value without an iPad.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.