Design for Developers vs Fashion as Design
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Frontend Masters · Design
Design for Developers
Coursera · Design
Fashion as Design
Per-criterion
Reviewers consistently praise the curriculum for distilling design theory (composition, color, typography, grids) into tight, first- principles lessons. The javarevisited round-up calls it the place "you start if you want to understand design principles deeply," though a few note the tooling segments (Sketch/Photoshop) now feel dated next to Figma.
Sarah Drasner's dual background as engineer and former scientific illustrator is the standout. Blog reviewers say she "perfectly selects the most important points" and "explains them in a style that keeps attention," and her Netlify/Microsoft/Google pedigree gives the design advice real credibility.
It is bundled in the Frontend Masters subscription rather than sold standalone, so value depends on whether you use the wider library. At 4h20m it is short, which some see as efficient and others see as surface-level for the price of a subscription.
The CodePen/CSS Grid exercises and primitive-shapes drills are well liked and the GitHub repo makes them easy to follow, but reviewers note there is no single capstone project — it is more guided exercises than a portfolio build.
Developers repeatedly report applying the layout, color and typography rules immediately in real projects and collaborating better with designers; the main caveat is that the tool-specific demos age faster than the timeless theory.
Seven weeks built around 70+ garments — from kente cloth and denim to the little black dress and 3D-printed pieces. Studio visits, designer interviews and historian commentary give it real museum-grade depth. Capped slightly because it is a curated survey, not a comprehensive fashion-history syllabus, and the breadth means some garments get only a few minutes.
Led by MoMA senior curator Paola Antonelli with curators Michelle Millar Fisher, Stephanie Kramer and Anna Burckhardt. Reviewers consistently praise the authority and warmth of the presentation and the access to working designers. The curatorial voice is the single most-cited reason learners rate it highly.
Free to audit in full; the shareable certificate is $49 (or included with Coursera Plus). For genuine MoMA curatorial content with no paywall on the learning itself, the value case is among the strongest we have scored. Only reason it is not a flat 5 is that the certificate adds little career signal for the price.
Assessment is peer-reviewed reflection assignments plus weekly quizzes. Multiple reviewers flag the quizzes as generic and memorisation-based, and peer grading as inconsistent with no professional feedback. There is no portfolio artefact — output is written reflection, which suits the subject but limits the "project" dimension.
Gives learners vocabulary, historical context and a critical lens for thinking about clothing — genuinely useful for fashion students, writers, sustainability-minded shoppers and curious generalists. It does not teach you to design, pattern-cut or sew, so applicability for aspiring makers is limited. Best read as cultural literacy, not vocational training.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.