CourseVerdict

Logo Design: From Concept to Presentation vs The Golden Secrets of Lettering

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

Logo Design: From Concept to Presentation

4.5/ 5 · 34 opinions
26 positive6 neutral2 negative/ 34 total

Domestika · Creative Arts

The Golden Secrets of Lettering

3.9/ 5 · 1012 opinions
980 positive18 neutral14 negative/ 1012 total

Shared criteria

Content quality4.4 / 5

Sixteen lessons across five units cover principles, finding a designer identity, concept development, typography and presentation. High-level and concept-first rather than a click-by-click software walkthrough — by design, but it caps depth for those wanting technical execution.

Instructor4.9 / 5

Sagi Haviv is a partner at Chermayeff & Geismar & Haviv, the studio behind some of the most iconic American identities. Reviewers consistently call him brilliant, clear and inspiring; learning a working master's actual process is the course's defining strength.

Value for money4.5 / 5

A one-time purchase (often ~$10-15 on sale) for direct access to a designer of Haviv's stature is widely seen as a bargain. Lifetime access and the practical client-pitch lessons stretch the value well past the 2h33m runtime.

Real-world use4.6 / 5

The client-communication and presentation lessons are rare in logo courses and map directly to real freelance work. Learners repeatedly say the persuasion and process framing changed how they approach briefs, not just how they draw marks.

Content quality4.0 / 5

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.

Instructor4.8 / 5

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.

Value for money4.3 / 5

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.

Real-world use4.1 / 5

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.

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