Does anyone know a good Adobe InDesign course for an almost total beginner?
Replies12
- @Morphe Digital Design Thank you so much - I'll check that out :)
- @Moya Marshall pleasure
- Lynda.com is used by students to help them learn how to produce work in Indesign.
- @Aldo Scott Thanks so much! I'll check that out ASAP :)
- @Sara Nguyen Amazing, thanks for leaving the name! I'll check him out, skillshare seems like a winner!
- @Christopher Hunt Thank you - haven't heard of that one!!
- @Patrick Tawfik Yes I've spotted them!! Keep me updated with how it goes :)) Thank you
- @Ronna Sakowska Amazing thank you so much!! Will definitely check them both out, and definitely interesting to hear your opinion after completing a diploma!
- I second Skillshare as well. Really learned a lot from Daniel Scott's Illustrator courses so I bet his InDesign are good as well! https://www.skillshare.com/user/byol
- Adobe themselves have a learning programme, don’t know how good it is yet but I’m about to use it for Xd
- If you have access to LinkedIn Learning, I would recommend any videos from Nigel French.
- I found these, not sure how much they might help:https://digitaldefynd.com/best-adobe-indesign-tutorial-training-course-classes/You could also take out a Skillshare or LinkedInLearning trial and do one of those–both platforms have high quality courses on Adobe software, with LinkedIn offering them also by your knowledge level (Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced). They're the same quality (or even slightly more polished) than a diploma I completed. Skillshare often has coupons and vouchers that give you x months for free too if you dig around, often on channels they are sponsoring.Hope this helps.
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