10 Easy Drawing Ideas to Gently Get Back Into Art
- OKP Art

- Jul 14
- 3 min read
Updated: Jul 18

Whether you’re facing an art block or simply haven’t picked up a pencil in months (or years!), this is your reminder: your creativity is still here. It hasn’t left you, it’s only resting, waiting for your gentle return.
These easy drawing ideas are perfect for beginners, hobby artists, or anyone who needs a soft re-entry into creative expression. Each idea includes a mindful prompt and a quiet reminder that art isn’t about perfection, it’s about presence, play, and permission.
Here's a List of 10 Easy Drawing Ideas:
1. Draw a Leaf from Your Walk
Drawing a leaf is a beautiful way to slow down and reconnect with nature. Pick one from outside, or draw from memory. Focus on its outline, its gentle veins, or even exaggerate its shape into something more abstract.
There’s no pressure to make it perfect. Let your lines wobble. Let your pencil wander. You can do this.
2. Sketch Your Morning Cup
Your coffee or tea cup is a peaceful still life waiting to be noticed. Whether you draw it from above, from the side, or just its handle, it’s an invitation to observe, pause, and sketch without overthinking.
Add a swirl of steam or a spoon resting beside it. There’s comfort in everyday objects, and beauty too.
3. A Single Flower Study
Choose one flower, real, dried, or imagined, and draw it in soft detail. Tulips, daisies, roses, or even wildflowers can be lovely to observe. Don’t stress about symmetry or petals being "correct." Just let your lines move with grace and intuition.
Try different styles: contour, loose sketching, or even minimal outlines. There’s no such thing as a mistake, only happy accidents.
4. Repeat a Favourite Symbol
Pick a shape or symbol that resonates with you, like a crescent moon, a star, or a spiral. Fill a whole page repeating and playing with that shape. This kind of gentle doodling can be deeply calming and creative, without pressure to "get it right."
Turn it into a pattern, a mandala, or something entirely abstract. There’s freedom in repetition.
5. Draw a Mini Wildflower Meadow
Rather than one realistic flower, try drawing a little collection of simple flowers, daisies, clovers, or lavender sprigs. Make them up if you like! A meadow of your imagination. These are gentle, soft shapes that invite you to explore without perfection.
Fill the page or keep it tiny and delicate. Either way, it’s a reminder that you’re growing too, just like these flowers.
6. Express a Feeling with Abstract Shapes
Not sure what to draw? Let your heart guide you. Use shapes, lines, and colours to represent your current mood. Maybe that’s a swirl of blue, a page of tiny dots, or flowing lines with no end.
This is a drawing for healing, not showing. No rules. No plan. Just pure expression. Your feelings are valid. Let them have space.
7. Sketch the Sky Outside Your Window
The sky is always offering something: clouds drifting, birds flying, light shifting. Look up and try to draw what you see. You could even do a small series: morning, midday, evening.
Use soft shading, watercolours, or a pencil alone (digital too, obviously). The sky reminds us that we are allowed to change too.
8. Fill a Page with Eyes
Drawing eyes might sound tricky, but not when you let go of realism. Fill a page with eyes in all shapes and styles: wide open, sleepy, blinking, stylised. It’s fun, and expressive, and you’ll start seeing personality appear on the page.
This isn’t about precision. It’s about exploration. Let yourself be playful.
9. Sketch a Favourite Object
Pick something you love, a necklace, a candle, a keepsake, and draw it with care. Don’t worry about proportion or detail. Just observe and enjoy. This object means something to you, and capturing it on paper is an act of creative mindfulness.
Drawing what you love helps reconnect you to yourself.
10. Doodle Like Your Inner Child
Close your eyes and remember the joy of drawing as a child. What would she sketch? A rainbow, a cat, a house with a big sun? Let go of the adult in you and just have fun again. Scribble, colour outside the lines, and draw stick figures or stars.
You’re not behind. You’re right on time.
Just Begin, You’re Allowed to Start Small
Each of these easy drawing ideas is a gentle nudge, not a demand. The goal isn’t a perfect picture, but a moment of reconnection. Some days you’ll fill pages. Some days, a single line is enough.
So go softly. Go kindly. Go at your own pace.
You’ve got this. And your creativity is so glad you’re back.








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