CourseVerdict

Procreate: Creative Illustration Techniques vs Introduction to After Effects

Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.

Vero Navarro (Domestika) · Creative Arts

Procreate: Creative Illustration Techniques

4.4/ 5 · 24 opinions
19 positive4 neutral1 negative/ 24 total

Domestika · Creative Arts

Introduction to After Effects

4.4/ 5 · 4929 opinions
4781 positive98 neutral50 negative/ 4929 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.4 / 5

The course is more than a button-tour of Procreate — across 33 lessons and roughly 7.5 hours it walks the full creative process from idea generation to a finished, deliverable file, and folds in approachable mini-lessons on composition and colour theory along the way. Independent reviewer Meerkatsu describes it as "a jam-packed primer on illustration concepts and theory," and learners repeatedly say they were surprised by the depth: "I wasn't expecting so much detail and I especially loved the advice on generating ideas for compositions." The recurring content caveat is the animation chapter, which reads as a bolt-on rather than an integrated part of the syllabus.

Instructor4.7 / 5

Vero Navarro is the standout strength and the reason the course rates so highly. She is described over and over as exceptionally clear, detailed and warm, and the independent blog singles her out as "the most interactive of all the teachers encountered on Domestika so far" — actively encouraging students in the course feed. Learners across languages echo it: "She's amazing with going through the details especially on how to use Procreate" and "Excellent teacher!" Her demonstrations of building a complete artwork from scratch are the part beginners say they had been missing elsewhere.

Value for money4.2 / 5

As a one-time Domestika purchase — frequently discounted into the low-double-digits with lifetime access, downloadable resources and a certificate — this is strong value for ~7.5 hours of structured teaching from a working illustrator. The honest deductions are that Domestika's list price is far higher than the typical sale price (so you should never pay full), and that a slice of the runtime goes to the weaker animation module that not every buyer will use.

Portfolio output4.1 / 5

The course is built around a clear final project — illustrating a creative composition from your own idea through to a finished file — and the thousands of uploaded student projects show it produces real, varied results. Learners value that they watch Vero create a complete piece end to end rather than just isolated techniques. The main wrinkle some raise is reduced instructor feedback on submitted projects over time: one reviewer noted it was a "shame that the teacher no longer comments on the work."

Real-world use4.3 / 5

Because the course teaches transferable fundamentals — composition, colour, idea generation and a repeatable workflow — rather than a single copy-this illustration, even experienced Procreate users report picking up new methods they carry into their own work: "I've learned a lot about new techniques and methods of using Procreate." It is genuinely a from-zero on-ramp ("perfect for getting familiar with Procreate") that still leaves beginners able to produce and finish their own illustrations independently.

Content quality4.5 / 5

The course packs 61 lessons across roughly 14 hours and 2 minutes into five coherent modules: Basic Concepts (workflow, timeline, masks, layers, effects, compositions), 3D Space (cameras, lighting, shadows, depth), Motion Graphics (shape layers and text animation), Post-production (tracking, keying, rotoscopy on real footage), and Advanced Basics (expressions, scripts, plugins). The breadth is genuinely unusual for a course marketed to beginners — most competing intro courses stop at mask and keyframe basics, while this one reaches expressions and rotoscopy. Students consistently describe the curriculum as "very complete" and "goes far beyond what you'd expect from an introduction." The 30 included practice exercises and 62 downloadable resource files give learners hands-on repetition at each stage rather than passive video watching. The principal content criticism — and it is genuine and consistent — is that the UI demonstrations were recorded on older After Effects versions; as of 2025-2026, students note that interface panels and menu positions have shifted, requiring them to locate features independently. This does not break the learning experience for motivated students, but it does add friction for complete beginners who may not know how to search for moved menu items. The course's organizational structure, lesson sequencing, and topic coverage nonetheless earn it a 4.5 — a high bar that the sheer volume of positive, unprompted reviews supports.

Instructor4.6 / 5

Carlos "Zenzuke" Albarrán brings more than ten years of professional experience as a creative director, 2D and 3D animator, and motion graphics artist to this course. He co-founded the motion design studio Maaambo and has taught at Madrid's most respected design institutions for over six years, alongside parallel online teaching through Domestika. His professional toolkit — Illustrator, Photoshop, Affinity Designer, Animate, Cavalry, Cinema 4D, and After Effects — reflects a working designer's reality rather than a narrow specialist's view. Across thousands of student reviews, the most frequently recurring praise clusters around three qualities: patience, clarity, and methodical pacing. Students describe him as explaining concepts "from first principles," moving "step by step," and never assuming prior knowledge. One reviewer summarized it as "the professor masters the program completely and has a very clear and simple manner of explaining." Several English-speaking students note that the original audio is in Spanish, requiring use of subtitles, and suggest an English audio track would improve accessibility — a platform constraint rather than a teaching quality issue. Zenzuke's standing observation about After Effects — "a great program, but it has been lacking competition to get its engines started and innovate again" — reflects the kind of industry-practitioner perspective he brings to instruction: contextual, honest, and experience-based rather than purely promotional.

Value for money4.4 / 5

Domestika prices this course at approximately $42.99 USD, and it frequently appears in platform-wide sales at significantly lower prices — many students report purchasing for under $15 during promotional events. The one-time purchase model grants permanent access to all 61 lessons, 30 exercises, and 62 downloadable resource files, unlike subscription-based alternatives that terminate access on cancellation. For the price of a single dinner, learners get 14+ hours of professionally produced instruction from a working industry practitioner with a decade of experience — a value proposition that reviewers consistently describe as exceptional. The course is also part of Domestika's "Basics" series, meaning it feeds naturally into the Advanced After Effects follow-on course (also by Zenzuke, with its own 1,200+ reviews), giving learners a clear progression path without needing to switch platforms. The one legitimate value concern raised by reviewers is the outdated UI recordings: paying $42.99 for instruction that requires self-navigation around changed menus is a minor but real inconvenience, particularly for absolute beginners. This is tempered by the fact that the core concepts — keyframes, compositions, effects, expressions — have not changed meaningfully between After Effects versions, making the course durable beyond its recording date.

Real-world use4.3 / 5

The five-module curriculum maps closely to actual After Effects production workflows. Module 4's coverage of tracking, keying (green screen removal), and rotoscopy on real footage is directly applicable to commercial video post-production work. Module 5's introduction to expressions and scripts bridges into the kind of automation and dynamic animation used in professional motion design studios. Multiple reviewers noted using skills learned in this course immediately in their university projects, client work, or personal creative projects. Carlos Zenzuke's professional background at Maaambo studio ensures that technique choices reflect industry reality — he teaches precomposing, 3D camera workflows, and export pipelines as they are actually used in commercial production rather than as academic demonstrations. The main real-world limitation is that the course is explicitly an introduction: learners will not emerge as professional motion designers, but they will have a solid foundation to continue independently or through the Advanced After Effects follow-on. Reviewers who used the course as a university supplement reported that it worked well in parallel with academic animation programs, suggesting its practical applicability is recognized even in formal education contexts.

Retention & engagement4.2 / 5

The 30 practice exercises embedded throughout the course represent Domestika's strongest lever for skill retention, and students consistently acknowledge their value: reviewers mention that the exercises and 62 downloadable files make it possible to practice each technique immediately after watching the lesson. The module structure — five distinct units moving from Basic Concepts through Advanced Basics — gives learners natural stopping points and mental grouping of related skills, which research on spaced practice supports as effective. Students who progress through all five modules report feeling confident enough to attempt independent animation projects, suggesting that retention translates into genuine capability rather than passive familiarity. The main retention risk, flagged by several reviewers, is that the course is long — 14 hours across 61 lessons — and learners who rush through it in a single weekend absorb less than those who pace themselves. One reviewer explicitly advised others to "not do the course in one afternoon — go slowly through the lessons" for maximum understanding. The community feature on Domestika, where students can post project work and receive feedback from peers and occasionally the instructor, provides an additional accountability layer, though community engagement quality varies by learner activity level.

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