Below you’ll find an easy step-by-step tutorial for how to draw a Snowy City Tutorial Video. The swirly sky is a nod to Van Gogh’s famous Starry Night painting.
Snowy City Painting
The best painting projects often come from some of the simplest of drawing projects. This snowy city sky is a series of buildings, with snow-topped roofs, sitting below a swirly sky. Easy to draw, and thus easy to paint.
The extra fun little twist to this painting is that the swirls in the sky, which are kind of “Starry Night” looking, are traced again with more blue paint after the first layer is dry. The extra paint creates a deeper layer of blue and makes those swirls look all the more mesmerizing.
For maximum results, I recommend using liquid watercolor paint on real watercolor paper. Years of painting with students taught me that it was the only way to get that really pretty textured color that watercolors are famous for.
Watch a fun short video for a Snowy City
Student Art Gallery
Join “The Daily Draw” to get this free tutorial!
Save me to your Pinterest Board!
Snowy City Coloring Page
Materials for Snowy City Drawing
- Drawing Paper. This is the good stuff you can buy in bulk for a good price.
- Pencils. I like how this brand always makes nice dark lines.
- Black Marker. A permanent marker will give you a dark black color.
- Note: All of the above are Amazon affiliate links.
Step by Step Directions for Snowy City
Time needed: 1 hour
Draw and Paint a Snowy Winter Night
- Draw a snow base line.
- Draw three large buildings with snow tops.
- Add smaller buildings on the left.
- Add smaller buildings on the right.
- Fill the buildings with windows.
- Start the large swirls in the sky.
- Continue the swirls in the background.
- Trace with a marker and paint the buildings.
- Paint the sky. Add another paint line over the swirls.
Splatter white tempera paint when dry.
Already subscribed to “The Daily Draw”?
Great, then use the button below to get your free Snowy City tutorial. And thanks for wanting to bring more step-by-step, no-prep art lessons to your classroom!