CourseVerdict

The Art of Sketching: Transform Your Doodles into Art vs Logo Design with Draplin: Secrets of Shape, Type and Colour

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

The Art of Sketching: Transform Your Doodles into Art

4.3/ 5 · 32 opinions
27 positive4 neutral1 negative/ 32 total

Skillshare · Design

Logo Design with Draplin: Secrets of Shape, Type and Colour

4.0/ 5 · 42 opinions
30 positive8 neutral4 negative/ 42 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.1 / 5

Sixteen lessons across five units and a final project (2h31m) cover hand-liberation warm-ups, drawing from real objects, turning objects into characters, expressions, body movement, basic and isometric perspective, colour and sharing work. A complete sketchbook tour for beginners. Capped because it is short and deliberately introductory — no deep anatomy, rendering or advanced perspective.

Instructor4.7 / 5

Mattias Adolfsson is the single most-praised element across the sample — a working illustrator (The New Yorker, NYT, Cartoon Network) whose friendly, generous, story-driven teaching is named repeatedly. Domestika lists a 99% positive rating across 5,773 reviews. Parka Blogs called the instructions clear and concise.

Value for money4.6 / 5

Roughly $13 (frequently discounted from a ~$31 list price) for a lifetime-access sketchbook course with downloadable resources and a certificate. No subscription needed. Against Skillshare ($14/month) or LinkedIn Learning ($40/month) the one-time cost is hard to beat for the hours you keep forever.

Portfolio output4.0 / 5

The course is built around a single tangible deliverable — a filled sketchbook plus a final piece pulling the exercises together — which is more portfolio-shaped output than many Domestika Basics tool tours. Capped because the artefact is a personal sketchbook, not a client-grade brief, and platform peer feedback is light.

Real-world use3.8 / 5

Builds a durable daily-drawing habit and a loosen-up workflow that transfers to any illustration, concept or comic practice. Limit is scope — this is creative-confidence and observational sketching, not commercial illustration, character pipelines or production rendering.

Content quality4.4 / 5

Tight 70-minute walk-through of one logo (a family crest) from research to vector polish. Praised across the corpus for clarity and density of Illustrator tips. Capped because the syllabus is narrow — no full brand-system work, no presentation deck, no client process.

Instructor4.8 / 5

Draplin is the single most-cited reason to take the class. Reviewers converge on the same descriptors — funny, no-nonsense, generous, "honest and electrifying" in Skillshare's own framing. Nine years of consistently positive coverage from HN to Logo Design Love.

Value for money4.5 / 5

Included in the Skillshare subscription (~$14/month after trial). A single 70-minute class is hard to compare to multi-month bootcamps, but for the price the catalogue access alone — five Draplin classes plus thousands of others — makes the value case clear.

Portfolio output4.0 / 5

One end-to-end project — a family crest — produces a shareable portfolio artefact, and the Skillshare projects tab has hundreds of completed submissions to learn from. Capped because peer feedback is minimal and there is only one brief, not a series.

Real-world use4.1 / 5

Illustrator shortcuts (Envelope Distort, Offset Path, "keep it live") and the simplification mindset transfer directly to client work. Limit is scope — the class does not cover briefs, presentations, revisions or brand systems, which a real logo job demands.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.