You can leave some brightness in the middle to simulate the Milky Way.
Three tips for drawing clouds with coloured pencils
Drawing clouds may be one of the most interesting, as well as challenging, parts of landscape drawing. Do it wrong and you end up with clouds that look like floating cotton balls, but get it right and your cloudscapes will take on a whole new life!
Consider a sky with wispy clouds against a radiant, orange sunset or the drama of grey storm clouds against a deep cobalt sky. No matter what your landscape comprises, it’s clear that the sky needs to work, whether it includes cirrus clouds, cumulus cloud cover or ominous thunderheads.
Layered clouds create an interesting challenge for expert landscape artists, as they are often best depicted by soft watercolour or pastel techniques. But is it possible to do the same thing with the hard tip of a coloured pencil?
There are techniques you can use to create realistic clouds, ones that compliment your landscape painting. It’s all about getting the right combination of colours, tonalities, shapes, and textures, along with the method of application.
Drawing fluffy clouds with coloured pencil and felt!
One problem that comes from using pencils is that they draw lines.
Normally, the only time you will see a line in the sky is when a plane leaves a vapour trail. Lines are even less likely to appear in clouds, so applying coloured pencils with traditional shading techniques, such as hatching or cross-hatching, may not be the best approach.
So how can you resolve this problem?
You could steal a technique from pen and ink artists, and stipple the surface with tiny pencil dots, so close together that they overlap and cover the surface completely. This could work for drawing clouds, as using multiple colours could create a subtle, muted effect.
However, there is a faster way to draw clouds
You can add the pigment to your drawing by first transferring it from the pencil to a piece of rough watercolour paper to form a “paintbox” or palette. Use medium-heavy pressure to get a thick layer of pigment to work with.
Use a piece of white felt, blending stump or cotton swab, to pick up the colour from the watercolour paper palette. Gently wipe the felt onto your drawing to create a thin layer of pigment. Take it slowly. Build up the values and colour gradually, blending the areas so you don’t end up with hard edges. You may need to replenish your palette multiple times.
Don’t worry if the colour extends into other areas of your drawing. As you are using light pressure, it will be possible to pick up any stray pigment with a kneaded eraser once you have completed your sky and clouds. If you want to protect the paper next to your sky from any pigment contamination, cover it with a piece of paper or an eraser shield, and then stroke your felt from that onto your cloud drawing each time.
Don’t throw your felt away after use. Keep it with your drawing supplies to reuse for future art projects.
You can also use this technique for distant, grassy fields, but take care not to pick up a piece of felt that you have used for that purpose when working on your sky!
If you are working on a soft paper, such as Stonehenge or Canaletto Liscio, this process can lift the surface slightly by the rubbing action, so more care is necessary. Hot Press watercolour papers like Fabriano have a more resistant surface and are less prone to damage. If the surface starts to lift then you can apply “first aid” by burnishing with a white pencil.
Drawing clouds and skies with watercolour pencils
Drawing clouds is quicker if you use water-soluble pencils, such as Derwent Watercolour, or Caran d’Ache Museum Aquarelles. However, if you plan to use wet media anywhere in a drawing you will want to prepare in advance by choosing a good quality watercolour paper for your artwork.
Papers up to 300gsm in weight will need stretching first to avoid buckling. I wrote a page on stretching watercolour paper that you might like to check out before starting. If you would rather avoid this, pick a heavier paper of at least 425gsm.
As with the last method, you will also require a piece of rough watercolour paper to act as your palette. Scribble Ultramarine or a similar blue pencil onto this to give you plenty of pigment to work with.
Re-moisten the sky area and let the paper absorb some of the water for a few seconds.
Dampen your watercolour brush and pick up colour from your palette. Introduce the pigment to the paper, then tilt your drawing board to encourage it to run along the moist surface in the direction you desire. Be prepared for it to choose its own path! You can exert limited control by pushing it where you want it to go with the tip of your brush.
In Peter’s sample, he wanted the blue sky to show between horizontal clouds, so he held the board on its side.
You can never guarantee the results, so just go with the flow and work with what you get. You can lighten areas later by adding water and soaking up the colour or darken passages by introducing more pigment where it has ended up too pale.
Aim for some variation in colour and value to create a sense of depth. Remember that clouds often have a lighter top surface and shadow shapes at the bottom, so aim for different densities of colour throughout your painting. Clouds also create shadows on the ground below so include those in your painting, especially if it’s depicting a beautiful sunny afternoon!
Don’t worry if the pigment runs into an area that you were reserving for trees. A little blue under the foliage will add depth to the painting, as in Peter’s finished painting shown below.
Consider also using this technique to create other kinds of lighting effects, such as sunlight or moonlight, in your drawings.
More examples of watercolour pencil skies and clouds
Below are three further examples of drawing clouds and skies with watercolour pencils.
What You Will Need
- Some sheets of paper
- Hard pencil (HB)
- Medium soft pencil (2B)
- Soft pencil (5B or lower)
- Cotton swab/blending stump
- Eraser
- White gel pen (only for the starry sky)
You can read more about these tools in the introduction to How to Draw Trees.
How to Draw a Cloud
Step 1
Use a hard pencil to sketch the shape of a cloud very lightly, drawing a few intersecting ovals in various sizes.
Step 2
Draw a ragged outline of the cloud going around the shape suggested by the ovals.
Step 3
Tilt your pencil to draw with a side of it. Drag it all around the cloud, covering the background with gray. Don’t push too hard, and try to create uniform strokes.
Step 4
Use your blending tool (cotton swab, blending stump, finger wrapped in a tissue) to blend the strokes. Try not to ruin the general outline of the cloud.
Step 5
Take a softer pencil and repeat the previous two steps. Again, don’t press too hard—you can’t blend something that has been pushed deep into the paper!
Step 6
Take an eraser, make sure it’s clean (“erase” a spare piece of paper to remove dirty parts), and carefully “draw” ragged parts of the cloud. To keep them white, clean the eraser from time to time or rotate it to use a cleaner corner.
Step 7
Take the softest pencil and add some darker strokes right behind the outline. Blend it as well.
Step 8
Take a hard pencil and sketch the outline of the shadow area.
Step 9
Shade the shadow area, tilting the pencil.
Step 10
Blend the shadow, trying to stay within the outlines of the cloud.
Step 11
Add small shadows in the light area.
Step 12
Take the eraser and use it to make the border between light and shadow clearer.
If it gets too clear, you can always blend it:
Step 13
Take the softest pencil and use it to make the outline more striking.
Draw a Sunny Sky
Step 1
Use a hard pencil to draw a very subtle outline of the sun. It doesn’t need to be a perfect circle.
Step 2
Tilt the pencil to darken the sky around.
Step 3
Blend it as described in the previous section.
Step 4
If the blending process distorted the outline of the sun, use the eraser to clean it.
Step 5
Use the eraser to “draw” the bright parts of the clouds around.
Step 6
Take a softer pencil and darken the sky around the clouds and sun. Leave a lighter band around the sun.
Step 7
Darken the middle part of the clouds as well, staying away from the borders.
Step 8
Darken the sky some more, using a softer pencil if necessary.
Step 9
Make the sky even darker, but only at a distance from the sun.
Step 10
Use the eraser to “draw” the outline of the clouds.
Step 11
Use the softest pencil to increase the contrast by adding some dark.