Urban Sketching | Drawing What You See vs Photography Basics and Beyond: From Smartphone to DSLR
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 · Creative Arts
Urban Sketching | Drawing What You See
Coursera · Creative Arts
Photography Basics and Beyond: From Smartphone to DSLR
Per-criterion
Thirteen lessons across two hours and nine minutes cover simplifying a scene, identifying vanishing points, capturing movement, sketching people from a glance, framing architecture and incorporating watercolour. The content is intelligently chosen for beginners — it identifies the conceptual barriers to sketching on location and removes them one by one. Capped because the course covers one-point perspective only, the watercolour section is a single lesson rather than a parallel track, and intermediate sketchers will find the material too introductory.
Peggy Dean is the most-praised element across every source category in our sample by a significant margin. She is described as the best tutorial instructor one learner had encountered across thousands of YouTube videos. Her ability to explain the why behind each decision — not just the what — and her explicit permission-giving around imperfect sketches is cited as a confidence shift that outlasts any specific technique. She has 400,000-plus total students across 50-plus Skillshare courses and has appeared on the Today Show and Wall Street Journal.
Included in the Skillshare subscription at approximately $14/month (or ~$168/year billed annually) after a free trial. The same subscription unlocks all 50-plus of Peggy Dean's classes — botanical illustration, hand lettering, watercolour, nature drawing and more — plus thousands of other creative courses. A companion one-point-perspective urban sketching class is available for $12 as a standalone on her own website. The per-class value within a Skillshare subscription is very strong for creative learners who plan to take more than one class.
Each of the three urban scene demonstrations — alley stairs, street intersection, isolated bicycle — produces a complete, shareable sketch. The class project asks learners to produce their own urban scene sketch. The Skillshare projects tab provides hundreds of completed submissions to learn from. No instructor feedback is provided on submitted work; peer commentary is the only critique channel, and it is typically light.
Urban sketching is by definition a real-world practice — you take your sketchbook outside and draw what you see. Peggy Dean's specific focus on simplification, embracing imperfection and identifying vanishing points in actual street scenes transfers directly and immediately to outdoor sketching practice. Multiple learners describe attempting their first sketch on location the day of or day after completing the class. The limit is depth: one class is a launch pad, not a full urban- sketching education.
Across five courses the fundamentals — exposure, the ISO/shutter/aperture triangle, depth of field, composition, light and basic Lightroom — are taught clearly and at a beginner-friendly pace. Glendinning and Sullivan are repeatedly praised for thoroughness. Capped because several reviewers flag the Lightroom and smartphone sections as dated, and courses 3-4 as padded with off-topic chatter.
Professors Peter Glendinning and Mark Sullivan are the most-cited strength in the first four courses — "thorough", "great advice", "easy to follow". The score is held back by a recurring complaint that the instructors are absent from the discussion forums and never personally critique work, most acutely in the capstone where they "make only token appearances".
Free to audit; ~$49/month subscription for graded assignments and the Michigan State certificate, completable in roughly two to three months. Strong value for a university-backed beginner curriculum. Capped because the capstone month adds little new content for the same monthly fee and a minority called the production quality "not worth the price".
Real shooting assignments, a web gallery and a portfolio-building capstone give learners genuine practice and shareable work. But project quality is bottlenecked by peer grading: many reviewers report superficial one-word critiques, plagiarised submissions, bot accounts and slow turnaround, which undermines the feedback loop the projects depend on.
Multiple learners report going from "knowing nothing" to confident shooting, selling prints, or switching toward photography seriously. The exposure and composition fundamentals transfer directly to any camera. Limited by the absence of business-of-photography content and by post-production teaching that lags current Lightroom versions.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.