User Experience Design Fundamentals 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 Fundamentals
Skillshare · Design
Logo Design with Draplin: Secrets of Shape, Type and Colour
Per-criterion
Twelve hours across Jesse James Garrett's five planes — strategy, scope, structure, skeleton, surface — gives a coherent mental model most beginner UX courses lack. Capped because tool and visual-design sections have aged since the 2017 build.
Joe Natoli's 30 years of consulting show in dense analogies and no-nonsense framing. Reviewers consistently call him engaging and clear. The recurring critique is verbosity — some lectures drag and repeat points that could be tighter.
A one-time Udemy purchase, frequently on sale near $15, for 12 hours of a veteran practitioner's framework is strong value versus subscription or bootcamp pricing. No certificate of professional weight, but lifetime access offsets it.
Lab exercises follow each major section and force application of the concepts. The honest gap, flagged by reviewers, is the absence of one continuous project carried through the course — exercises are isolated, not a portfolio build.
The strategy-to-surface model and emphasis on business and user needs map directly onto how UX is practised in industry. Principles are described as ageless; the dated tool screenshots are the only thing that doesn't transfer cleanly to 2026 workflows.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.