Procreate: Creative Illustration Techniques vs Procreate for Beginners: Digital Illustration 101
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
Domestika · Creative Arts
Procreate for Beginners: Digital Illustration 101
Per-criterion
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.
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.
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.
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."
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.
Thirty-seven lessons across four hours and six minutes cover the full Procreate feature set in a logical seven-part sequence: app essentials, interface customisation, mark-making and the brush library, layer management and blend modes, selection and transformation tools, colour and opacity adjustments, and finally exporting work and recording timelapse animations. The architecture is thorough and well-paced for a first encounter with the app. Each of the seven course units ends with a dedicated Practical Phase segment that consolidates the preceding lessons, which is the right curriculum design for software-based instruction. The honest limit of the content is depth over breadth: the course teaches every major Procreate tool competently, but because it is structured as a software-orientation Basics course rather than a project-led illustration course, there is no single extended illustration project that guides learners from concept to finished piece. A learner who finishes the course will know Procreate fluently; they will not automatically know what to draw with it. Learners who want creative direction alongside tool instruction should follow this with Brad Woodard's own Analog-Style Digital Illustration course or another Domestika illustration course to apply the toolkit.
Brad Woodard is the course's consistent dominant positive across every source in our sample. He is the co-founder of Brave the Woods, a commercial illustration studio that has worked for Ford, Microsoft, Target, Coca-Cola, Penguin Random House, USPS, and eBay — clients that represent the full range of professional digital illustration work. He holds a BFA in graphic design from Brigham Young University and has 160,000 followers on Domestika. His teaching approach is described across sources as clear, precise, and charismatic: students in the Domestika review archive use phrases like "explains very well," "easy to follow and understand," and "brings charisma to lessons." The Designest review noted that his professional design experience informs the instruction in practical ways — tips and shortcuts are presented alongside context for why they matter in real illustration work, rather than as isolated feature demonstrations. The one mild criticism that surfaces occasionally is that the instruction pace is occasionally brisk: a small number of learners note that Brad moves through some gestures and menu options quickly enough that absolute beginners needed to pause and rewatch to keep up. On balance the instruction quality is among the highest in Domestika's illustration catalogue.
Domestika Basics courses — of which this is one — are priced lower than standard Domestika courses. Depending on the promotion cycle, the course runs from roughly $9.99 to $59.99 on a one-time purchase basis, with lifetime access, a certificate of completion, and 25 additional downloadable resources included. At the $9.99 to $19 sale price point — which Domestika reaches several times per year across its promotional calendar — four-plus hours of structured Procreate instruction from a professional commercial illustrator with 114,000 enrolled students represents excellent value. The one-time purchase model is a clear advantage over Skillshare's monthly subscription for learners who want to learn one specific software tool and return to the lessons over time. The practical cost context is that Procreate itself is a one-time $12.99 purchase on the App Store, and an Apple Pencil and iPad are required hardware — the course assumes you have these. Learners who are buying hardware for the first time should factor in total setup cost when evaluating overall value, though the course itself is very affordable relative to the tool mastery it delivers.
Each of the seven units ends with a Practical Phase exercise, and the final unit covers exporting artwork and recording timelapse videos of the creative process. The Practical Phase segments are the course's primary portfolio output mechanism, but they are technique reinforcement exercises rather than complete illustration projects. A learner who completes the full course will have practised every major Procreate feature and will have a series of exercise files demonstrating competency — but will not have a single finished, portfolio-ready illustration to show from the course itself. The Domestika projects gallery for this course reflects this: submitted projects are predominantly feature demonstrations and brush explorations rather than complete compositional illustrations. This is the most significant honest limitation of the course for learners whose goal is to build a digital illustration portfolio. Reviewers on Learnopoly and Courselounge note the same constraint: the course is best characterised as tool-fluency training rather than illustration-project training. Brad Woodard's separate Analog-Style Digital Illustration course addresses this gap directly and is the natural next step for learners who finish this Basics course.
Procreate is the dominant professional digital illustration app for iPad-based artists. Learning it fluently — which is what this course delivers — is directly applicable to commercial illustration, character design, editorial illustration, product branding, and surface pattern design. The specific tools covered (brush library, blend modes, layers, masks, selection tools, transformations, colour adjustments, export options) are the exact toolkit that working illustrators use on client projects. Brad Woodard's professional context is embedded in the instruction: he draws on his studio's client work with Ford, Microsoft, and Target to contextualise how specific features are applied in real deliverables. The animation and timelapse export instruction also has immediate real-world utility — sharing timelapse process videos on social media is a standard client-acquisition tool for working illustrators. The one real-world gap is that Procreate is iPad-exclusive; learners who work primarily on desktop or Windows will not be able to apply any of this instruction without an iPad and Apple Pencil.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.