Drawings Ideas for Girls 12 Years Old That Are Easy
Drawing Ideas for Kids
It's fairly obvious that kids like to draw, but sometimes plopping a stack of blank paper and some markers in front of them doesn't cut it.
That blank white paper can be enough to shut your imagination down completely. Luckily, I'll be acting as your drawing ideas for kids' superhero today.
Behold the epic list of 100 kids drawing ideas and you can thank me profusely in the comments. Or just pin or bookmark this post to come back to later…
Looking for some more low-key sketchbook ideas? I got you covered for those, too.
Why I'm Obsessed With Kid's Drawing Ideas
Drawing is the backbone of art-making. Really. And I know there are plenty of people in art-related fields who don't draw. But let's see how many ways I can beat this point to death:
- Practicing drawing helps train the eye to see what is really there and not what you presume to be there.
- Drawing helps train the hand to be comfortable with using, um, drawing utensils.
- Drawing is easy to start and stop- it can be done anywhere, at any time. You don't need a big space or fancy setup to draw; you just need to be willing to do it.
- Making quick drawings is an excellent way to warm up your brain and hands for any type of art-making. Or anything, really. Make a few doodles before a test, before bedtime, during dinner…. tap into the subconscious creative brain pockets. (I'm not a doctor, but I'm sure that's the medical term.)
- Establishing a drawing practice when you're a child can lay the foundation for a lifelong drawing habit. Here are some health benefits of drawing.
Since I'm tired of coming up with benefits of drawing for kids, and since you probably are already a fan of drawing, or you wouldn't have clicked through to read this post, I will now delight you with 100Â tantalizing drawing ideas for children to try.
P.S. I'm not focusing solely on traditional drawing here- we've got a little bit of everything, from drawing from observation to doodling on photos.
Drawing for Kids
I have the projects loosely based on age group, but feel free to try the drawings with any age kid – you can modify them according to their interest and ability. Click on an image to see more or scroll below each gallery to read a short synopsis and you can click through from there.
Easy Drawing Ideas For Very Young Kids (0-5ish)
 1. Mess-Free Paint Drawing  2. Drawing From Life  3. Draw With Blocks  4. Preschool Sharpie Shoes  5. Draw on Maps  6. Mixed Media for Preschoolers  7. Mixed up Hand Turkeys  8. Toilet Roll Scribblers  9. DIY Edible Finger Paint
- This is like reverse finger painting – and no mess! Little kids can draw on these paint bags and also see what happens to colors when they mix.
- When little kids draw live animals from observation, wonderful things happen.
- Kids love blocks. Kids love drawing. It just makes sense to combine the two.
- Mini fashionistas will ADORE drawing on their shoes and wearing their creations.
- Such a cool way to get kids to interact with maps and explore all the cool lines.
- So much good messiness when kids explore chalk pastels in this mixed media project for preschoolers.
- These mixed-up Hand Turkeys can be made any time of year and drawn all over for silly fun.
- Yes, toilet roll scribblers look like maybe the most fun way to draw, ever.
- Babies can get in on the action of drawing with this DIY (edible) finger paint.
 10. Drawing With Paint  11. Foil Scribbling  12. Box Drawing  13. Helmet Drawing!  14. Scribbly Stenciled Hearts
- Love the idea of kids using these cool tools to draw on their paper with paint.
- Foil scribbling is absolutely a magical experience for young children.
- It doesn't get much better than being plopped inside a big cardboard box with a pile of markers.
- I had to. I had to include this, even though the pin link goes nowhere. If any of you tries helmet drawings with kids, I absolutely need photos.
- Scribbly stenciled hearts are a fun way to explore drawing with tools, and then painting.
Easy Drawing Ideas for Young Elementary Kids
 15. Crayon Transfer Drawing  16. Drawing With Yarn  17. Falling Back Portraits  18. Surprise Folded Creatures  19. Draw While Listening to Book  20. Crops Perspective Drawing  21. Cave Drawings  22. Popsicle Stick Tracing  23. Household Object Drawing
15. Â Crayon transfer drawing is such a cool twist to using a classic drawing medium.
16. Drawing with yarn! Yep, true story. This project is inspired by Harold and the Purple Crayon.
17. This is a really cool way to introduce perspective to younger elementary kids! Falling Back in Space Portraits.
18. A hilarious way to make drawing fun for any kid – surprise folded drawing creatures.
19. This is more of a general idea, but it's cool to see what pops into kids' minds to draw when they're listening to a book.
20. Rows of crops are a great idea for a perspective drawing project.
21. Hellooooo, cave drawing!
22. We love easy overlapping tracing projects like this popsicle stick art.
23. Household objects prompt some great drawing ideas.
 24. Chalk Pastel Monsters  25. Double Doodling  26. Skyscraper Drawings  27. Bird and Word Drawings  28. Hand Shadow Monsters  29. Van Gogh Sunflowers  30. Finish the Leaf Drawings  31. Tips for Self Portrait Drawings  32. Mirror Symmetry Drawing
24. Fun, bright chalk pastel monsters!
25. Double doodling is a totally cool way to really focus on what you are drawing in a fun way.
26. Skyscraper drawings. There isn't much here in the way of instruction, so here's my guess: Draw the buildings and watercolor paint them in. Mount on black paper and draw the background with pastels. What do you think?
27. I love this project so much. SO MUCH. Drawing words over a bird drawing based on a poem. Sweet.
28. These hand shadow monster drawings are just loads of fun times.
29. Every kid needs to try their hand at Van Gogh's sunflower drawings.Â
30. This finish the leaf drawing idea is a great observational study.
31. This post is really a bunch of tips and best practices for when young kids start to draw portraits.
32. Mirror symmetry drawing is a great drawing game and fun practice.
 33. DIY Temporary Tattoos  34. Road Trip Drawing  35. Elephant Drawing  36. Mixed Media Drawing  37. Grid Line Drawing  38. Monkey Portraits  39. DIY Dry Erase Book
33. What kid wouldn't want to join in when the end result is a page of temporary tattoos drawn by them?
34. Road trip drawing prompts are an amazing way to get kids drawing instead of staring at the iPad in the car.
35. This just looks like a good elephant drawing and painting fun.Â
36. Magazine pictures make great drawing starters for elementary kids.
37. Gridline drawings that you can color in or leave plain.
38. Monkey portraits are such a great way to round out learning about primates.
39. DIY dry erase-book. I love this idea for a no-stress drawing session.
Cool Drawing Ideas for Older Elementary Kids
 40. Draw Water Droplets  41. Contour Line Shoes  42. Cool and Warm Hands  43. Observational Drawing  44. Thumbprint Self Portrait  45. Character Tracing  46. Sharpie Shoes  47. Picasso Self Portrait  48. Doodle Cubes
40. A cool study in drawing water droplets.
41. Contour line shoe drawings – these are given an added twist when the mini stick figure people come in!
42. I like the combo of color study and line drawing in these cool and warm hand drawings.
43. Kids can ease into drawing the human form with these cool little wooden figures.
44. Thumbprint self-portraits use the lines of your thumbprint to write about yourself. I love those drawing/writing art projects.
45. We're big fans of tracing. Lots and lots of tracing is a great way to learn composition and warm up the drawing skills.
46. Sharpies and Converse are a match made in heaven for creative kids who want to fancy up their kicks.
47. These Picasso Self Portraits are a pretty cool way to get a cubist look to your drawings.
48. Drawing goes 3-dimensional with these very cool doodle cubes.
 49. Drawing on Rolls of Paper  50. Cool Still Life  51. Feather Drawing  52. Abstract Shadow Tracing  53. Pi Math Art  54. Draw 3D Letters  55. Parabolic Curve Drawing  56. Looking Up Cityscapes  57. Speed Drawing
49. This whole post is full of fun ideas for using large rolls of paper, but I particularly love the amazing Circulatory System going on in this one!
50. This is a fun way to liven up a regular still-life drawing.
51. Feather drawing is just an all-around good idea.
52. One of my favorite drawing activities ever is this abstract shadow drawing project.
53. This is the single best math art project there ever was.
54. Because kids like to draw words with cool letters.
55. Okay, this is the second-best math drawing project of all time.
56. Looking up Cityscapes make me a little dizzy, but they're so good.
57. Speed Drawing – what a fun way to sneak in a bunch of drawings.
 58. Name Doodles  59. Through the Keyhole Drawings  60. Geometry Trees  61. Grid Drawing  62. Leaf Doodling  63. Micrography
58. Name Doodles. Arting up your name is always a big hit.
59. Through the keyhole drawings. This project was done by Middle School age, but I bet 4th/5th grade would have fun with this.
60. These Geometries couldn't be easier to draw, and the result is awesome. We love easy kid drawing ideas.
61. Grid drawing is such an effective way to facilitate kids really looking at what they are drawing.
62. Leaf doodling, because sometimes there are so many leaves that fall down, and you just need to draw all over them.
63. Micrography is a big name for a snappy drawing project that includes words.
 64. Andy Warhol Cans  65. Double Cursive Tangling  66. Alien Perspective Drawing  67. Paul Klee Castles  68. Banners
64. Super fun Andy Warhol drawing projects.
65. Double Cursive tangling so you can see if the kids have been practicing their cursive writing.
66. A friendly alien makes a guest appearance in this perspective drawing project.
67. Exploring Paul Klee and different media with these Paul Klee Castles.
68. Banner drawing practice is fun to do instead of homework.
Cool Drawing Ideas for Teens
 69. Cropped Face  70. Drawing Negative Space  71. Erase Your Face  72. Metamorphosis  73. Card Self Portrait  74. Foreshortening
69. I love the idea of honing in on part of a face to draw.
70. Josef Albers would teach his students to draw the negative space they saw inside/between objects.
71. Erasing part of your face seems like a fine drawing for kids' idea. Maybe a little painful.
72. So cool! Metamorphosis art is the best idea ever.
73. I like playing card self-portraits as a nice detail-oriented drawing project.
74. Here's a great example of a foreshortening drawing study.
 75. Mandala  76. Draw Lips  77. Easy Tangle Drawing  78. Cross Hatching  79. Blind Contour Drawing  80. Tangle Drawing Portrait  81. Loose Line Landscape  82. Looping Letters  83. Giant Tree Drawing
75. This Mandala project blows me away, and she provides amazing, detailed steps.
76. Let's practice drawing smoochy lips.
77. This easy-tangle drawing idea chases away all anxiety and fears of not being a good artist.
78. I love this drawing project for deeply diving into using crosshatching.
79. Blind contour drawings get really cool with the addition of highlighters.
80. A super fun way to break up the surface of a portrait drawing.
81. This is inspiring as a way to get students to draw landscapes really loosely and almost scribbly.
82. Looping Letters to practice hand lettering. She's got some great lettering tutorials here.
83. This is for inspiration. All teenagers should make a giant drawing at some point.
 84. Blackout Poetry  85. Giant Tape Drawings  86. Cool Line Design  87. Rock Mandalas  88. Grid Tangle Drawings  89. Restaurant Sketch  90. Copy the Spider  91. Facial Feature Practice  92. Extended Line Drawings
84. Here's a really cool twist on blackout poetry with the addition of drawings.
85. Maybe not in the grocery store, but I would love to see the big tape drawings a whole gaggle of teenagers comes up with.
86. This is a meditative line design technique that looks like it would be pretty fun to color in.
87. I like the idea of a whole collection of doodled mandala rocks.
88. Tangling in a grid portrait is a great way to practice value.
89. Restaurant sketches could translate into lunchroom sketches for high school students, or maybe dinnertime sketches.
90. Another great way to practice detailed drawing is to copy half of a spider or another, less creepy creature.
91. If you're tired of drawing your own face, you can always cut out some magazine facial features to practice drawing.
92. Here's a nice juicy drawing project to focus on for a while: Extended Linear Line Drawing.
 93. Random Circle Doodling  94. Drawing Wood Grain  95. Lined Paper Drawing  96. Portrait- White on Black  97. Marble Drawing  98. Oil Pastel Fruit  99. Small Landscape Series  100. Tessellations
93. This example from a 'Wreck This Journal' book is a fun reminder that doodling circles are a great way to fill up a page.
94. Practice drawing wood grain! Do it!
95. No doubt you've seen this sort of thing before, but it's a good example of making that lined paperwork for you in art.
96. Ahhhh it's so fun the first time you use white pencil or pastel on black paper. Isn't this a great look?
97. Marble drawing for the win.
98. Teens can experiment with oil pastels with a close-up fruit drawing.Â
99. Explore a series of small landscape drawings as a great sketchbook practice.
100. Another really well-explained drawing project! This one is all about drawing tessellations. So cool.
The teens will also most definitely dig my 50 sketchbook ideas to use as warm-ups or more drawing ideas.
More cool drawing ideas here:
- Sketchbook Prompts
- Tangle Art and Drawing Games for Kids Book
- Easy Tangle Drawing
- Drawing Using Household Objects
Inspired by these drawing ideas? Check out my Drawing Games for Kids post, too. You'll love it!
Source: https://craftwhack.com/100-crazy-cool-drawing-ideas-for-kids/
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