Our story

Aidesoranix was created by a team of designers, visual system researchers, and learning authors who wanted to make AI for designers clearer, more structured, and suitable for everyday creative work. The idea for the course did not come from theory alone, but from real experience: in the beginning, many people on our team faced the same challenge — AI could generate interesting options, but the working process often felt scattered. Prompts were inconsistent, visual options were difficult to compare, and creative directions often lacked shared logic.
This is where the Aidesoranix path began. We wanted to create more than a set of lessons. We wanted to build a learning system that helps a designer better understand an idea, describe it in words, review the visual direction, and organize AI work with more care. Our mission is to help designers develop AI-related skills through practical exercises, clear modules, prompt examples, and a thoughtful approach to the creative process.

The learning logic of the course was shaped by Nikolajs Ivanovs — AI Visual Systems Designer. Nikolajs has worked for more than 3 years in digital design, visual systems, composition review, and learning materials for designers. His background includes work with design studios, educational teams, small creative agencies, and independent learning projects. In previous roles, he created visual concepts, design series structures, moodboard systems, prompt maps, learning exercises, and materials for reviewing style, color, composition, and atmosphere.
Nikolajs became interested in AI for design when he noticed that many designers were using tools without a clear structure. They could create one interesting visual option, but they did not always understand how to repeat the logic, develop the idea, or keep a shared style across a series of materials. This became the base of his approach: AI should not replace design thinking, but it can become part of a process where intention, structure, review, and attention to detail remain important.
Over the years, Nikolajsr has contributed to learning materials used by more than 800 students and early-stage designers through online courses, creative workshops, and internal studio programs. He has worked on materials for teams focused on identity systems, digital layouts, visual series, editorial graphics, and learning design. His approach combines practice, clear explanation, and structured thinking.
At Aidesoranix, Nikolajs guides the learning sequence: from the first introduction to AI prompts to broader topics such as visual systems, light, mood, series logic, variations, and a personal prompt library. Each course is created so a designer can do more than review materials — they can gradually shape their own working method.
Aidesoranix does not make claims about instant changes or identical outcomes for every learner. We believe in thoughtful learning, practice, exploration, and skill development. Our courses are intended for designers who want to better understand AI as a tool for ideas, structure, visual review, and creative exploration.