Illustrated Lettering: Drawing Intricate Floral Forms vs Surface Pattern Design on Skillshare
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Skillshare · Design
Illustrated Lettering: Drawing Intricate Floral Forms
Skillshare · Design
Surface Pattern Design on Skillshare
Per-criterion
A focused, well-produced class that walks through one complete process: gathering real flowers for reference, sketching a large letterform, collaging digital imagery in Photoshop, then sketching and inking the final details. Reviewers repeatedly call it "really easy to follow" and packed with useful micro-tips. Capped because it is short (a bit over an hour) and teaches a single technique rather than lettering fundamentals.
Gemma O'Brien is an award-winning artist known for bold calligraphy and large-scale murals, with work commissioned by Apple, Nike and Google and held in the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. Reviewers describe her teaching as "mesmerizing" and her video as "highly produced, beautiful." Her clarity and the way she demystifies daunting work are the most praised elements in the corpus.
Included in a Skillshare subscription (~$14/month or ~$168/year) with a free trial, so the class itself costs nothing extra if you are already a member. Strong value as one class among thousands, but at roughly an hour and one technique it is not a standalone purchase justification — its worth depends on you using the wider Skillshare library.
The class is built around a single, clearly scoped project: produce one finished illustrated floral letterform from scratch. Reviewers say the intermediate digital step "turns a potentially daunting project into something very do-able," which makes the project genuinely achievable for near-beginners. Limited only because it is one deliverable, not a progressive series of briefs.
The analog-plus-Photoshop workflow transfers well to editorial lettering, poster art and detailed personal pieces, and Gemma's tips on shading and checking progress are practical. But this is a specialised decorative technique, not client-work strategy, type fundamentals or vector production, so it is one tool in a kit rather than a career-ready pathway.
The Skillshare classes cover pattern fundamentals, vectorising hand-drawn elements in Adobe Illustrator, colour and repeat types — a solid beginner toolkit. Reviewers note the instruction is clear but stays at introductory depth; business strategy, licensing and portfolio-building are absent from the Skillshare content.
Bonnie Christine is universally praised across sources. Reviewers describe her as sweet, generous and methodical, and she is frequently cited as the single best entry-point teacher for surface pattern design. The Skillshare classes showcase the same clear, encouraging style as her paid programmes.
Access through a standard Skillshare subscription (~$14/month) makes the classes easy to sample with low financial risk. Several reviewers used the Skillshare content as a low-cost proof-of-concept before committing to a more expensive course. The value is high relative to price — the ceiling is scope, not delivery.
Students create seamless repeat patterns and vectorised watercolour elements as class projects. The outputs are functional beginner patterns; however, reviewers note that working through Bonnie's exact process tends to produce similar-looking results across students, limiting portfolio differentiation.
The Illustrator and pattern fundamentals are genuinely useful, but reviewers consistently say the Skillshare classes alone leave large gaps in becoming a working surface designer: no licensing guidance, no art-director perspective, and no structured feedback on commercial readiness.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.