Modern Techniques for Watercolor Cityscapes 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
Modern Techniques for Watercolor Cityscapes
Coursera · Creative Arts
Photography Basics and Beyond: From Smartphone to DSLR
Per-criterion
The course runs 14 lessons across 4 units plus a final project, totalling 1 hour 55 minutes. Unit 1 (Introduction) covers sources of inspiration and sets the creative framing for the curriculum. Unit 2 (Fundamentals) is the most content-dense section, covering materials selection, dilution mechanics, and three distinct painting approaches — positive painting (building form with washes), negative painting (revealing light by working around it), and destructuring (breaking up forms to suggest movement and atmosphere). Subject selection rounds out the unit. Unit 3 (Sketch and Painting) moves into practice: tonal sketching from reference, colour palette selection for urban environments, light wash application, and structural wash techniques for architectural forms. Unit 4 (Gouache, Shadows and Finalization) covers gouache application as a secondary medium for highlights and details, shadow rendering and focal point enhancement, and finishing and display preparation. The curriculum's design is unusually cohesive for a short course: the three painting methodologies in Unit 2 (positive, negative, destructuring) are not decorative variety — they map onto specific challenges that urban landscapes present (open sky vs reflective windows vs complex street-level detail), and Unit 3's tonal sketching lesson applies that vocabulary directly to working from photographic reference. The gouache section in Unit 4 is a genuine practical addition: using gouache selectively over dried watercolour for highlights and focal sharpening is a professional cityscape technique that most beginner watercolour courses do not cover. The course's limit is its brevity — at under two hours, individual lessons average around eight minutes, and the depth on any single technique is necessarily constrained. Learners who want extended practice sequences on a single technique (for example, an hour-long deep-dive on how to render glass and steel reflections in urban settings) will not find that level of granularity here. The 12 downloadable resources and 10 hands-on exercises extend the effective learning time, but the core instruction is deliberately compressed. For a beginner-level introduction to watercolour cityscapes, the curriculum is well-structured and practically complete; for intermediate learners looking for technique depth, the brevity is the main limitation.
Roberto Zangarelli was born in Rome in 1970, studied advertising graphics at IED (Istituto Europeo di Design), and operates Erregi Grafica, a Rome- based graphics agency. In addition to commercial work, he maintains a studio-gallery in central Rome shared with other artists, where he exhibits and teaches watercolour workshops locally and internationally. He has received awards in Italian and international watercolour competitions and collaborates with watercolour manufacturers, including having developed his own line of paintbrushes — a level of professional engagement with the medium that signals genuine craft authority rather than instructional convenience. Zangarelli's teaching approach is consistently described across our sample as clear, didactic, and patiently explained. Reviewers in multiple languages (English, Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese) use overlapping vocabulary: "well explained," "ottimo corso" (excellent course), "très bon cours" (very good course), "profesor expert" — the consistency across language communities is a meaningful signal of actual pedagogical clarity rather than cultural preference. Several reviewers specifically highlight that his techniques and explanations were "100% useful" and that they could immediately apply what they learned. The only recurring criticism is a production-level note — a small number of reviewers mention wanting closer camera angles during the painting demonstrations so brush placement and paint load are more visible. This is a legitimate production request, not a teaching criticism, and one that is common across Domestika courses that were filmed before the platform upgraded its filming standards for close-up detail capture. It does not affect the quality of the instruction itself, and does not appear to have prevented learners from following and replicating the techniques demonstrated.
The course is listed at $29.99 USD with a Domestika Plus subscription option at $27.42/month (billed annually at $329). Domestika's frequent promotional sales — including a regularly offered 98%-off first-month trial at $0.50 — mean most learners access this course at well below list price. Lifetime access is included with any purchase. At promotional pricing ($10 to $15 is the common sale range for individual Domestika courses), almost two hours of structured beginner watercolour instruction from a professional instructor, with 12 downloadable files, 10 exercises, and a final project framework, represents strong value. The materials list is minimal and accessible — watercolour paper, a small set of brushes, watercolour paints, masking tape, and a kneaded eraser; the optional addition of gouache is covered in Unit 4 and is itself an inexpensive medium. Learners report that the techniques taught are immediately applicable to their own urban sketching and watercolour practice, which increases perceived value beyond the course itself — the skills are transferable to any urban subject, not locked to the specific demonstration cityscapes Zangarelli paints. The 100% positive rating across 320 reviews from 6,564 enrolled students is a strong independent signal that learners feel the exchange of time and money for instruction is worthwhile.
Support on Domestika courses follows the platform's standard model: no direct instructor feedback on submitted student projects. Roberto Zangarelli does not review individual learner work. The community-facing support channels are the Domestika projects tab — where learners upload completed work and peers can comment — and the Q&A section on the course page, which Domestika moderates. The platform offers audio in Italian, English, Spanish (Latin America), French, Portuguese, and Turkish, with subtitles in Italian, Spanish, English, Portuguese, German, French, Polish, Dutch, and Turkish. The broad multilingual availability is meaningful for a course whose learner community spans Italy, France, Spain, Brazil, and the English-speaking world, and contributes to a support experience that is accessible across language backgrounds. However, the absence of instructor feedback on student work is the main structural limitation at this level of community scale. With over 6,000 students enrolled, the projects gallery is active and provides useful calibration for what learners at different skill levels produce, but it is not a substitute for directed technical critique. The support score reflects that Domestika's community infrastructure is solid and the multilingual coverage is genuinely good, while acknowledging that one-on-one instructor feedback is not part of what any Domestika course provides.
Watercolour cityscape painting is a commercially and culturally active genre: urban sketchers, travel illustrators, architectural illustrators, and plein air painters all operate in this space, and the techniques Zangarelli teaches — working from photographic reference, using tonal sketches to plan compositions, applying positive and negative painting approaches to architectural subjects, and using gouache selectively for detail — map directly onto how professional illustrators and urban sketchers actually work. The three painting methodologies (positive, negative, destructuring) give learners a vocabulary for approaching different types of urban subjects, which is more transferable than a course structured around a single demo painting. The inclusion of gouache as a secondary medium for highlights and focal sharpening is a professional workflow detail that distinguishes the curriculum from pure beginner watercolour courses that treat gouache as an advanced topic to be deferred. Multiple reviewers note that they were able to apply the techniques to their own cities and reference photographs immediately after the course — the skills are subject-agnostic within the urban landscape genre and do not require Zangarelli's specific demonstration cityscapes to be useful. The course does not cover plein air (painting on location) technique, and learners who specifically want to develop the skills for outdoor urban sketching will need to supplement with material on working from life rather than photographic reference. The final project — an urban landscape of the learner's choice, built from a personal photograph — is portfolio-ready in the sense that any competently executed urban watercolour is presentable; it is not positioned as a commercial portfolio piece in the way that some Domestika courses structure their capstone projects.
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.