Adobe Photoshop CC – Essentials Training Course vs Complete Web Design: from Figma to Webflow to Freelancing
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
Adobe Photoshop CC – Essentials Training Course
Udemy · Design
Complete Web Design: from Figma to Webflow to Freelancing
Per-criterion
Adobe Photoshop CC – Essentials Training Course
28+ hours of video covering selection tools, masking, retouching, compositing, typography, colour adjustments, and web and print workflows — enough breadth to take a true beginner through to confident intermediate work. Updated January 2025 to reflect the current Photoshop CC interface. Capped at 4.6 because a handful of reviewers noted pacing inconsistencies between sections and limited coverage of advanced compositing techniques like frequency separation or channel masking.
Daniel Walter Scott holds both Adobe Certified Instructor (ACI) and Adobe Certified Expert (ACE) credentials and runs Bring Your Own Laptop (BYOL), a dedicated Adobe training platform. Reviewers consistently describe him as enthusiastic, clear, and well-matched in pace to complete beginners. The fractional deduction reflects occasional feedback that the delivery can feel slightly over-cheerful, and that advanced learners find the hand-holding unnecessary.
At Udemy sale prices of $12–15 — which occur several times per month — for 28+ hours of content with lifetime access and future updates, the value proposition is very strong. The ceiling is that the list price is artificially inflated, and a small minority of learners paid nearer the full rate and felt the experience did not match the premium positioning.
Projects span logo design, poster creation, social media graphics, and photo retouching — real-world artefacts rather than contrived exercises. Each project ships with downloadable starter assets. The limitation is Udemy's Q&A-only feedback loop: no peer review and no instructor critique of individual submissions. You produce work but receive no evaluation unless you post in the discussion board and happen to get a response.
Covers the workflows a junior designer or freelancer actually uses: masking, smart objects, retouching, layer styles, and basic compositing. Several learners noted they applied skills from the course in paid client work within weeks. The ceiling: the course stops before advanced techniques like 3D, complex channel masking, and Lightroom integration.
Complete Web Design: from Figma to Webflow to Freelancing
Across 26 opinions the most consistent praise is the "3-in-1" structure: design theory (layout, typography, visual hierarchy), then designing in Figma, then building the same design live in Webflow with no coding. Reviewers repeatedly call it "a little gem" and note Vako "takes you through essential design theory and then teaches Figma and Webflow" rather than jumping straight to tools. The 18.5–22.5 hours of video and ~199 lessons end in a real portfolio site, which keeps the content concrete. Capped slightly below 5 because the freelancing third is lighter than the design two-thirds.
Vako Shvili is the single strongest recurring theme. Students describe him as "really good", "quite thorough, explaining every detail" and good at "step-by-step explanation". Several highlight that he records a full video review of each student's finished project at the end — unusual for a self-paced Udemy course — and that he keeps videos updated to the latest Figma and Webflow UI (last refreshed April 2026).
On Udemy the course routinely sells around $15 for lifetime access during sales, and multiple reviewers explicitly call it "worth the investment" at that price. One noted it was "enough to launch you on your journey, especially if you combine it with the completely free material found on Webflow University". The honest caveat: a live Webflow site needs a paid Webflow plan beyond the free workspace, an ongoing cost the course price doesn't cover.
The course ends with a fully designed and built portfolio website plus a client-style project and a freelancing plan (portfolio, pricing, outreach). Reviewers value building the exact site they designed, and Vako's end-of-course video critique adds feedback most MOOCs lack. Marked down a little because the projects are guided closely, so the final output looks similar across students rather than fully original.
Figma and Webflow are both industry-standard, and the pipeline (design → build → land clients) maps onto real freelance work. Several students report it gave them enough to start. The realistic ceiling: the freelancing/business module is more of an introduction than a deep system, and the course targets beginners, so experienced designers will find the design theory basic.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.