Adobe After Effects: The Complete Beginner Course (All Versions) vs Illustrated Lettering: Drawing Intricate Floral Forms
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
Adobe After Effects: The Complete Beginner Course (All Versions)
Skillshare · Design
Illustrated Lettering: Drawing Intricate Floral Forms
Per-criterion
The course delivers a complete beginner arc across roughly 22 lessons and about four hours of video: the After Effects interface, compositions, layers, keyframes and animation basics, masking, effects, and a capstone "Morph" visual-effects project. Class Central's listing carries a 4.7 rating across 20 Skillshare ratings, and the cross-listed Udemy edition holds 4.3/5 from 265 reviews — consistent signals that the curriculum is accurate and well-scoped for absolute beginners. Reviewers on CourseDuck repeatedly describe it as "great beginners course with plenty of exercises" and praise its clear, project-based structure. The main content limitation, named by multiple learners, is that it stops at the beginner ceiling: students like David Sadleir and Paw Pedersen explicitly asked for an intermediate follow-up because the class ends just as they wanted to go deeper.
Tobias of Surfaced Studio is the standout dimension. He has produced After Effects and VFX "edutainment" for over a decade, with a YouTube following north of 300,000 subscribers, and his teaching philosophy is that training should be both educational and entertaining. CourseDuck reviewer John Nelson calls him "a highly entertaining and knowledgeable instructor," and Gordon Riley goes further: "Hands down the best instructor for After Effects and Adobe Premiere, and this course is no exception." Review blogs single out his explanations as "the most articulate, funniest, and most clearly presented" in the After Effects space. He focuses on teaching not just which button to press but why a given tool fits a given task — the mark of an instructor building transferable intuition rather than recipe-following.
On Skillshare the class is covered by the standard subscription (around $14/month or ~$168/year, frequently discounted, with a free trial), which gives access not only to this course but to Surfaced Studio's other classes and the entire Skillshare catalog. For a learner who wants a single, well-produced four-hour foundation before branching into the platform's thousands of motion and design classes, that is strong value. The same course also exists on Udemy as a paid one-time purchase and free on Surfaced Studio's own academy, so price-sensitive learners have options — but inside the Skillshare subscription model the cost-per-hour of instruction here is genuinely low.
The course is explicitly project-based: every section builds toward the hands-on Morph VFX final project, and CourseDuck reviewers note it comes "with plenty of exercises." Beginner Dorian Lambert, with no prior video editing experience, reported following along and "made the Morph effect with ease," which is exactly the outcome a project-based beginner course should produce. The limitation is breadth: it is a focused four-hour class with one capstone, not a sprawling library of drills. Learners who want dozens of standalone exercises or repeated practice projects will finish this and immediately want more — which is why so many reviews end with a request for an intermediate sequel.
For a skills course, the relevant "outcome" is confidence and capability, and the review record is strong here. Reviewer Melissa described After Effects as initially "very daunting and difficult" and credited the course with making her "completely comfortable with After Effects." Hadeel Abobakr Baazim called it "a very useful course that made me very comfortable with adobe after effect," and absolute beginners with no editing background report completing the capstone successfully. The consistency of "went from intimidated to comfortable in four hours" across independent reviewers is the clearest evidence the course reliably moves true beginners to a functional baseline.
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.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.