CourseVerdict

User Experience Design Essentials - Adobe XD UI UX Design vs Logo Design with Draplin: Secrets of Shape, Type and Colour

Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.

Udemy · Design

User Experience Design Essentials - Adobe XD UI UX Design

3.6/ 5 · 41 opinions
28 positive7 neutral6 negative/ 41 total

Skillshare · Design

Logo Design with Draplin: Secrets of Shape, Type and Colour

4.0/ 5 · 42 opinions
30 positive8 neutral4 negative/ 42 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.2 / 5

A genuinely comprehensive ~12-hour beginner UX/UI curriculum — UX vs UI, low- and high-fidelity wireframes, prototyping, components and repeat grids, micro-interactions, user testing and developer hand-off. Reviewers describe it as thorough and well-sequenced. The cap is structural: every lesson is built on Adobe XD, a tool Adobe placed into maintenance mode in 2023, so a chunk of the screen-specific content is now legacy knowledge.

Instructor4.7 / 5

Daniel Walter Scott is an Adobe Certified Instructor and Adobe Max speaker, and across thousands of reviews he is the single most-cited reason to take the course — clear, passionate, funny, and good at reinforcing concepts. A minority find the humour and pacing distracting, but the instructor signal is overwhelmingly positive and consistent with his other courses.

Value for money3.8 / 5

At the typical Udemy sale price (~$13-20, the effective price almost everyone pays) the teaching quality is excellent value. The discount is that you are paying to learn a discontinued tool — the XD-specific skills no longer compound, so the value-per-dollar is lower than the same instructor's Figma course at the same price.

Portfolio output4.1 / 5

Learners build real, portfolio-shaped deliverables — a mobile app and a website mockup with working prototypes — rather than isolated drills, and reviewers say they finish with confidence and tangible work. The artefacts are tied to XD's prototype format, which limits how shareable they are in a Figma-dominant hiring market.

Real-world use3.4 / 5

The transferable UX thinking — wireframing, components, prototyping logic, client briefing, dev hand-off — is real and survives the tool change. But the tool itself does not: Adobe XD is no longer sold standalone or actively developed, and the industry has consolidated on Figma. That gap is the main drag on day-one job applicability for new designers.

Content quality4.4 / 5

Tight 70-minute walk-through of one logo (a family crest) from research to vector polish. Praised across the corpus for clarity and density of Illustrator tips. Capped because the syllabus is narrow — no full brand-system work, no presentation deck, no client process.

Instructor4.8 / 5

Draplin is the single most-cited reason to take the class. Reviewers converge on the same descriptors — funny, no-nonsense, generous, "honest and electrifying" in Skillshare's own framing. Nine years of consistently positive coverage from HN to Logo Design Love.

Value for money4.5 / 5

Included in the Skillshare subscription (~$14/month after trial). A single 70-minute class is hard to compare to multi-month bootcamps, but for the price the catalogue access alone — five Draplin classes plus thousands of others — makes the value case clear.

Portfolio output4.0 / 5

One end-to-end project — a family crest — produces a shareable portfolio artefact, and the Skillshare projects tab has hundreds of completed submissions to learn from. Capped because peer feedback is minimal and there is only one brief, not a series.

Real-world use4.1 / 5

Illustrator shortcuts (Envelope Distort, Offset Path, "keep it live") and the simplification mindset transfer directly to client work. Limit is scope — the class does not cover briefs, presentations, revisions or brand systems, which a real logo job demands.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.