Gouache for Beginners: Learn to Paint Bold and Beautiful Gouache Paintings 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.
Zaneena Nabeel (Skillshare) · Creative Arts
Gouache for Beginners: Learn to Paint Bold and Beautiful Gouache Paintings
Coursera · Creative Arts
Photography Basics and Beyond: From Smartphone to DSLR
Per-criterion
The class is built around a single, well-chosen idea: learn gouache by painting five complete moonlit landscapes from start to finish, rather than working through abstract swatch-and-technique drills. Zaneena Nabeel opens with the genuinely beginner-blocking questions — what gouache actually is, why it sits between watercolour and acrylic (as beautiful as watercolour, as forgiving as acrylic because you can paint light over dark and correct mistakes), and crucially what materials you need. Her answer to the materials question is the most beginner-friendly thing about the curriculum: unlike watercolour, you do not need expensive artist-grade paper or paint — student-grade gouache and ordinary paper work fine. That single message removes the single biggest barrier that stops beginners from starting. Each of the five moonlit-landscape projects layers a new concept — basic colour mixing, building a graded night sky, painting a glowing moon, silhouette work, reflections — so the techniques accumulate rather than arriving as a disconnected list. The limitation is scope: this is a focused, project-led class, not a comprehensive gouache reference. It does not deeply cover colour theory, advanced brush handling, opaque-versus- transparent layering theory, or subjects beyond atmospheric night landscapes. Learners who want to paint people, still life, botanicals or bright daytime scenes will finish this class confident in moonlit scenes specifically and will need to take her other classes (or branch out) to generalise. For its stated goal — getting an absolute beginner painting finished, frameable gouache pieces fast — the content is well-paced and well-sequenced.
Zaneena Nabeel (who paints under the name Aurora by Z) is an architect by training who left architecture to pursue art full time, and she has been teaching professionally since 2018. On Skillshare she holds Top Teacher status with more than 50 watercolour and gouache classes and over 100,000 students enrolled across her catalogue — one of the platform's most established painting instructors. Her professional credibility extends beyond the platform: she has collaborated with art brands including Princeton Brush and Art Philosophy, and she authored the instructional book "Bold and Beautiful Watercolor Skies" (Walter Foster / Quarto). The consistent thread across student feedback on her classes is her teaching manner: reviewers repeatedly describe her as calm, gentle, thorough, and encouraging — she walks through each step several times before the project and explains not just what she is doing but why, which is exactly the register an anxious beginner needs. The recurring sentiment that her classes leave students "more confident and relaxed" is a direct outcome of that teaching style. The architecture background also shows up usefully in how she structures composition and value, even if she rarely names it. The half-point we hold back reflects only that her gentle, slow pace — a strength for true beginners — can feel unhurried to learners who already paint and want denser, faster instruction.
The class is not sold standalone; it is included in a Skillshare membership, which runs roughly $14 per month or about $99–$168 per year depending on the plan and promotion, and new members can usually access a free trial. Within that model the value is strong: a single membership unlocks this class plus Zaneena's 50-plus other watercolour and gouache classes and the platform's entire creative catalogue, so a beginner can paint all five moonlit landscapes here and then continue straight into her seascape, foggy-landscape, winter-landscape and beach-sunset classes without paying again. For someone who will paint regularly, the subscription pays for itself quickly against the cost of in-person workshops or per-course platforms. The honest caveat is the subscription model itself: if you only want this one short class and nothing else, you are paying for a month (or a trial you must remember to cancel) rather than buying a single lifetime course, and the membership lapses when you stop paying. Material cost is deliberately low — student-grade gouache and ordinary paper — so the total cost to actually complete the class is among the lowest in our creative-arts catalogue.
The class delivers five separate finished paintings rather than one, which is unusually generous for a beginner class and is its standout structural strength: a learner who completes it walks away with multiple frameable moonlit landscapes, not a single exercise. Because each project is a complete, self-contained painting taken from blank paper to finished piece, the output genuinely looks like art a beginner can be proud of and share — and the active Skillshare project gallery for the class shows a wide range of student submissions, from first-ever paintings to polished results. The portfolio limitation is one of breadth rather than quality: all five outputs are atmospheric night landscapes in a similar mood and palette, so the finished body of work is cohesive but narrow. It demonstrates that you can follow a moonlit-landscape process to a clean result; it does not yet demonstrate range across subjects or styles. As with all Skillshare classes, there is no individual instructor critique on submitted projects — feedback comes from the peer project gallery, not directed assessment — so learners cannot get Zaneena's personal verdict on whether their work is progressing well.
This is a hobby-and-confidence class first and foremost, and it is honest about that: the realistic real-world outcome is a beginner who can sit down with cheap materials and reliably produce a finished gouache painting they enjoy — a meaningful, genuine result for the large audience who paint for relaxation, mindfulness and creative satisfaction. The transferable foundations are real: handling an opaque water-based medium, building a graded sky, working light-over-dark, composing a simple landscape with a focal point, and the habit of completing a piece rather than abandoning it. Those skills carry into other gouache and even acrylic work. Where applicability is limited is on the professional and commercial side: the class does not address selling work, licensing, building a varied portfolio, working to a brief, or business skills, and its single-subject focus on moonlit scenes means it does not by itself prepare a learner for varied commissioned or client work. For its actual promise — making gouache approachable so beginners genuinely start and keep painting — it delivers directly; for anyone targeting paid creative work it is a confidence- building first step rather than a vocational course.
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.