CourseVerdict

Design for Developers vs The Art & Science of Drawing

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

4.3/ 5 · 22 opinions
16 positive4 neutral2 negative/ 22 total

Skillshare · Design

The Art & Science of Drawing

4.5/ 5 · 29 opinions
24 positive4 neutral1 negative/ 29 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.4 / 5

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.

Instructor4.7 / 5

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.

Value for money4.2 / 5

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.

Portfolio output3.9 / 5

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.

Real-world use4.3 / 5

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.

Content quality4.7 / 5

A genuinely systematic fundamentals curriculum — mark-making, measuring, proportion, 3D form, contour, and light-and-shadow — taught one skill at a time with clear demonstrations. Reviewers repeatedly call it the clearest beginner drawing instruction they have found. Capped only because it is deliberately foundational: no advanced rendering or stylistic range.

Instructor4.7 / 5

Eviston is the standout. Across our sample he is described as thorough, clear and easy to follow, and a Hacker News user recommended his series "without reservation". Twenty-plus years of studio and academy teaching show in the structured, one-skill-per-lesson pacing.

Value for money4.5 / 5

Included in the Skillshare subscription (~$14/month). The full multi-class Art & Science of Drawing path — basic skills through shading — sits inside one subscription, so a learner who works the sequence over a month or two gets an entire foundations program for the price of one month of access.

Portfolio output4.4 / 5

Every lesson ends with a concrete practice project, and the Skillshare projects tab carries thousands of student submissions. Learners report visible week-one improvement. Capped because the projects are skill-building drills, not a portfolio-grade body of finished work, and peer feedback is light.

Real-world use4.4 / 5

The fundamentals — observation, proportion, constructing 3D form, controlling value — transfer directly to illustration, design and any subsequent drawing study. Reviewers note the skills make it easier to pick up later, more specialised classes. Limit is scope: it teaches the foundation, not a finished professional specialism.

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