Illustrator Essential Training vs Graphic Design Basics: Core Principles for Visual 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.
LinkedIn Learning · Design
Illustrator Essential Training
Skillshare · Design
Graphic Design Basics: Core Principles for Visual Design
Per-criterion
Tony Harmer walks through Illustrator's core in a logical sequence — artboards, selection, shapes and line tools, path drawing and transformation, color models, gradients, strokes, brushes, layers and groups, patterns, appearances, transparency, type, image placement and export — and the 2024/2025 editions add a section on generative AI content. Across five released versions the official rating sits at 4.8/5 (2024: 1,148 ratings; 2021: 1,914; 2022: 1,676; 2023: 1,320), an unusually high and stable signal. Reviewers describe the material as dense and thorough; the main critique is that some assignment toolbars don't match the learner's default setup, and that experienced users hit familiar ground before the advanced sections.
Tony Harmer — a certified Adobe Creative Suite Master with 40+ years in the creative industry and close ties to the Illustrator product team — is the standout asset. Reviewers repeatedly single out his delivery as "detailed, easy to follow, and even entertaining," and even a 17-year Illustrator veteran reported learning new tricks. His voice, pacing and articulation draw consistent praise. The only recurring instructor complaint is occasional mismatch between his on-screen toolbars and a fresh install, which can briefly confuse beginners.
LinkedIn Learning is $39.99/month or roughly $19.99/month billed annually, and the course is also bundled with LinkedIn Premium Career and free through many public-library cards. For learners who already hold a LinkedIn subscription or library access, this 5–7 hour course is excellent value and the completion certificate posts straight to a LinkedIn profile. Paying the standalone monthly fee for this one course is less compelling — independent reviewers call the subscription "more on the expensive side" and "expensive if used infrequently," and the certificate is not accredited. The equation flips for prolific learners who tap the 20,000+ course catalogue.
Each lesson ships with downloadable exercise files and the course includes 22 quizzes for self-assessment, so learners practice alongside the instructor rather than just watching. The gap, flagged by multiple reviewers, is open-ended project work: the exercises are instructor-led replications rather than briefs that push learners to design their own piece, and one reviewer asked directly for "more practice sessions or more question examples." There is no portfolio-grade capstone and no instructor feedback on submitted work.
The skills taught — vector paths, transformations, color, type, brushes, patterns and export for print and web — are genuinely foundational and transfer directly to real Illustrator work. Reviewers describe the tool demonstrations as practical and immediately usable, and a decade-lapsed user called it a strong refresher on newer tools like the curvature tool. The certificate carries professional signalling value on LinkedIn but is not an accredited credential, so it complements rather than replaces demonstrated portfolio work.
The class condenses the most useful chapter of Lupton and Phillips's widely-assigned textbook "Graphic Design: The New Basics" into five tightly-edited lessons on symmetry, scale, framing, hierarchy, and grids. Reviewers consistently praise the quality and curation of the visual examples — many drawn from Lupton's curatorial work at Cooper Hewitt — and the way each principle is shown applied to real posters and layouts rather than abstract diagrams. The recurring limitation is depth: at 35 minutes the class introduces each concept rather than developing it, and reviewers who came in with any prior exposure describe the content as a strong refresher rather than new learning. There are no software walkthroughs, so the class teaches you what to look for, not how to execute it in a tool.
Ellen Lupton is one of the most credentialed instructors on the platform — Senior Curator of Contemporary Design at Cooper Hewitt, director of the Graphic Design MFA at the Maryland Institute College of Art, author of the bestselling "Thinking with Type," and a 2007 AIGA Gold Medal recipient for lifetime achievement. Co-instructor Jennifer Cole Phillips co-directs the same MICA MFA program. Reviewers single out the pairing as a genuine strength, noting that the two designers deliberately model disagreement — Lupton advocating for symmetry, Phillips for asymmetry — which gives beginners permission to treat the principles as tools rather than rules. The delivery is calm, articulate, and example-led; no reviewer in the corpus criticised the teaching itself.
The class has frequently been offered free, and is otherwise included in a Skillshare membership (roughly $14/month billed annually or about $32 monthly), which also unlocks Lupton's companion classes on typography and posters plus thousands of other design courses. For a 35-minute class the unit economics are excellent if you are already a member or catch it during a free window. The honest caveat reviewers raise is that you are paying a subscription for a very short class, so the value depends entirely on whether you use the wider library — a single 35-minute primer alone does not justify an ongoing subscription.
Skillshare's model is community-driven rather than mentored: there is a project gallery and discussion area, but no instructor office hours, graded feedback, or teaching assistants. Reviewers note that Lupton and Phillips do not actively respond in the class discussion, and that meaningful feedback depends on an active student community, which is inconsistent on shorter classes. The class project — apply the five principles to a piece of your own — is described as loosely briefed, leaving learners who wanted structured guidance to self-direct. This is a platform-level limitation rather than a fault of the instructors, but it is the weakest dimension of the experience.
The five principles are genuinely transferable — reviewers from marketing, photography, and self-taught design backgrounds report that the vocabulary of hierarchy, scale, and grids changed how they read and critiqued layouts immediately. Because the class is software-agnostic, what you learn applies whether you work in Figma, InDesign, Canva, or PowerPoint. The applicability ceiling is that the class builds critical literacy, not production skill: it sharpens your eye and gives you the language to explain design decisions, but you still need a tool-specific course and deliberate practice to turn that understanding into finished work.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.