Your first 10 drawings in colored pencil

There is a real learning curve in colored pencil, but it does not announce itself. Your first drawing will be scratchy. Your fifth will start to loosen up. By your tenth, you will see what the medium can actually do.

By Colin B. · Published June 14, 2026

Colored pencil rewards a counterintuitive approach. The beginner instinct is to press hard, cover ground fast, and reach for bright colors right away. The medium punishes all three of those instincts. The artists whose work you admire online built it up in dozens of light, patient layers. That gap between what you see and how it is actually made is the whole learning curve.

Ten drawings will not get you to that level. But they will get you past the frustrating early phase where the pencil scratches across the paper and nothing looks like you intended, and into a place where you can start to see what the medium can do.

Drawings 1 and 2: The pressure problem

Most beginners fill the paper tooth by the third pass. They press hard, lay down saturated color immediately, and then discover there is nowhere to go. The surface is full, the layers cannot build, and the drawing looks flat and overworked.

The fix is embarrassingly simple: use almost no pressure at first.

For your first drawing, pick something simple. An apple, a lemon, a single flower. Spend the first ten minutes doing nothing but value scales on a scrap of Bristol: draw a long rectangle and fill it from almost invisible to full saturation using only one pencil and varying pressure. Get the lightest touch you can manage at one end, and work slowly toward full pressure at the other.

Then apply that same restraint to the actual drawing. Six to eight light layers before you even think about pressing hard. That is the whole first secret. Let layers accumulate; they are doing work you cannot see yet.

Your first drawing will probably still look scratchy. That is expected. What you are building is the habit, not the result.

a drawing of a sheep and a lamb with colored pencils next to it
Photo by Elena Mozhvilo on Unsplash

Drawings 3 through 5: Understanding what layers actually do

By the third drawing you can start thinking about what layering is actually for.

Colored pencil does not mix colors the way paint does. You cannot blend red and yellow on the pencil tip and get orange. Instead, you lay transparent layers of each color over each other and let the eye blend them optically. Red on top of yellow on top of a little brown produces a warm, rich orange that you could not get by pressing hard with one orange pencil.

This is where the medium becomes interesting: you are building depth, not filling area.

The practical technique for these drawings:

Start with the lightest colors. If your subject has yellow highlights and dark shadow areas, lay in the yellow first everywhere, then add orange on top of that in the mid-tones, then red in the darker areas, then maybe a cool dark blue-violet in the deepest shadows. Light first, darks last.

Warm shadows and cool highlights (or vice versa). Real objects have temperature shifts between their lit and shadowed sides. A warm-lit apple has cooler shadows. A cool-lit lemon has slightly warmer shadows. This is what makes a drawing feel like an object instead of a flat shape.

Do not skip the whole surface. Beginners tend to finish one area and move to the next. Instead, build the whole drawing together, layer by layer. Everything stays in proportion and no one area gets over-worked while another stays unstarted.

Your third drawing will probably look better than your first two in ways you can point to but not entirely explain. That is the right feeling.

Drawings 6 through 8: The colorless blender

Around your sixth drawing, add the colorless blender pencil to the process.

A colorless blender is a wax pencil with no pigment. Run it over a layered area and the wax fuses the pigment into a smoother, softer blend. The texture of individual pencil strokes disappears. The colors merge. What was scratchy becomes smooth.

Two things to know before you try it:

First, you need layers before the blender can work. Four or five passes of light color is the minimum. One heavy pass of color and the blender just pushes it around messily.

Second, the blender has a direction. Blend from light areas toward dark areas, not from dark toward light, or you will carry dark pigment into your lights. Go slowly and see what happens before you commit.

The colorless blender changes the character of what colored pencil can produce. Before it: a drawing that looks like a careful, skilled drawing in pencil. After it: something that reads more like a painting. The transition is genuinely startling the first time it works.

person in gray long sleeve shirt holding pen
Photo by Jonathan Borba on Unsplash

Drawings 9 and 10: Working from a light box

By drawing nine, you are probably frustrated that your proportions are off. The subject reads as a lemon but not quite that lemon. The eye looks like an eye but the lid shape is not right.

A light box solves this. Print or sketch your reference on cheap paper, lay it on the light box, put your Bristol on top, and trace the basic outlines lightly in colored pencil. You now have accurate proportions to work within.

This is not a shortcut past the skill of drawing. It is the skill of separating two problems. When you are figuring out proportions at the same time as learning layering and blending, you are doing too many things at once. The light box isolates the color-building problem so you can focus on it.

Tracing gives you the structure. Everything else, all the layering and blending and color choices, is still entirely your own work. Every professional illustrator uses some version of this process.

Drawing nine will feel more controlled than anything you have done before. That is the light box working. Drawing ten will feel like the first drawing you made with real intention.

A woman artist is drawing at a drafting table.
Photo by Sema Martin on Unsplash

What you will get wrong (and why it is fine)

Every beginner in colored pencil fails at the same handful of things. The list:

Pressing too hard too early. You will do this in your first five drawings. It is the most common mistake and the one that costs the most (the drawing cannot recover once the tooth is full). The only fix is reps and restraint.

Running out of paper. You will accidentally draw to the edge of the usable area before the drawing is done. Start smaller than you think you need to. A 4x6 inch drawing on Bristol is less daunting than a full 9x12.

Choosing too-ambitious subjects. A detailed portrait with hair, skin, eyes, and clothing is not drawing 1. A single piece of fruit is. Give yourself an easy subject for the first five drawings so you can focus on the technique, not on making a complicated thing.

Abandoning drawings too early. A colored pencil drawing at layer three looks bad. At layer eight it looks completely different. Stay in it. Finish drawings even when they look wrong at the halfway point, because the halfway point is supposed to look wrong.

Nobody who sees your work cares about the ones that did not turn out. Neither should you.

What comes after drawing 10

By drawing ten you will have real, specific questions. Questions about how to handle hair or fur (short directional strokes, layered). How to make skin tones look natural (more layers than you think, warm over cool). How to draw realistic eyes (build the iris in concentric rings, add white pencil last).

A few things that make the next ten drawings better:

Find a single subject to specialize in for a while. Portraits, animals, food, flowers: pick one category and draw it ten times in a row. The specificity of focus accelerates learning faster than variety.

Watch Lachri Fine Art on YouTube. Lisa draws in real time, layer by layer, explaining every decision. Watching an entire drawing from first layer to final blending is more useful than any finished-work tutorial.

Buy a few Polychromos pencils open stock. After twenty hours of Prismacolors, try a single Faber-Castell Polychromos in a color you use frequently. The difference in how it holds a point and takes layers will tell you whether oil-based pencils are worth the switch for you.

You are past the hardest part. The medium is no longer fighting you. It is just you and the paper now.


Ready to buy your first pencils and paper? See our colored pencil art gear guide for exactly what to get first and what to skip.