Curriculum
The Qovelyra curriculum is designed as a guided path through AI for Design, moving from early visual planning to a complete creative study. Each section focuses on one part of the design process, so learners can study ideas, prompts, composition, mood, light, review, and reflection in a clear order.
Visual Planning
Begin with the foundation of a design idea. This section helps learners define subject, mood, purpose, color direction, and the first visual notes before creating a study.
Prompt Structure
Study how written direction can shape visual outcomes. Learners explore how to organize prompts around subject, setting, composition, atmosphere, detail, and variation notes.
Composition Study
Learn how layout choices influence the way an image is read. This section focuses on focal points, spacing, visual balance, scale, framing, and quiet areas within the composition.
Color Language
Explore how color supports mood and visual clarity. Learners study palette notes, warm and cool relationships, contrast, tonal balance, and restrained accent choices.
Light & Depth
Study brightness, shadow, reflection, and spatial atmosphere. This section helps learners describe light direction, focal glow, layered depth, and surface detail with more care.
Variation Review
Compare several visual directions from one idea. Learners practice reviewing differences in layout, mood, color, detail, and alignment with the original concept.
Creative Archive
Organize notes, prompt versions, comparison pages, and reflection sheets. This section helps learners build a personal record of design studies that can be revisited later.
Final Study
Complete a guided project that brings the curriculum together. Learners prepare a concept note, create variations, compare outcomes, and write a final reflection on their design choices.
Learning Format
The curriculum combines written lessons, visual examples, worksheets, prompt-planning pages, and review exercises. Each part is arranged to support calm study, steady practice, and thoughtful creative observation.