{"title":"How to Draw a Bird: Step-by-Step Bluebird Drawing for Beginners","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/crafts/how-to-draw-a-bird","category":{"slug":"crafts","name":"Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"Art for Kids Hub","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5XMF3Inoi8R9nSI8ChOsdQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgKIyhLUW6M"},"tldr":"How to draw a bird, step by step. Easy beginner bluebird drawing tutorial covering outline, wings, feet, branch, and coloring with colored pencils.","totalDurationSeconds":499,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["pencil","eraser","pencil sharpener"],"materials":["drawing paper","black fine-tip marker (Sharpie)","colored pencils","colored markers"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Draw the eye in the top-left of the paper","text":"Start with the eye. Put a small filled circle near the top-left of the page. Leave a tiny white speck inside it so the eye looks shiny and alive. That single dot anchors the whole bird - it sets the size of the head and where everything else will sit. Resist the urge to make it bigger than a pencil eraser. A small eye reads as realistic; a big eye reads as cartoon. Take your time and let the ink dry for a second before moving on."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Add the beak with a sideways V","text":"Right next to the eye, draw a sideways V pointing left. That V is the closed mouth line. Then trace the top of the beak as a curve that pushes forward and dips down to a soft point. Mirror it with a return curve underneath to close the beak. The video adds a small line through the middle to suggest the mouth opening. Your beak might come out a little long on the first try - that's fine. Practice is the whole point."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Sketch the top of the head","text":"Now give the bird a head. Starting just behind the eye, draw a smooth curve that arcs up and back down, ending behind where the body will sit. Keep the curve gentle - a sharp peak makes the bird look angry. The top of the head should sit a little higher than the eye, with the back sloping down toward where the wing will attach. Don't overthink it. One steady pass beats six nervous ones."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Draw the belly and body outline","text":"Drop a short diagonal line from the bottom of the beak to start the front of the chest. From there, sweep a long curve down and around to define the belly and the lower edge of the body. Stop the line where the legs and tail will eventually come in - roughly under the spot where you ended the head curve. The body shape is essentially a soft, lopsided oval that flares wider toward the back. Aim for one confident line."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Outline the wing with a diagonal curve","text":"The wing sits on the back of the bird and points toward the tail. Start your line at the top of the back, curve down and out to the lower right at about a 45-degree angle, then bring it back up to meet the body just behind the chest. Leave a small gap where the line attaches to the back - that gap reads as a feather break and gives the wing some depth. Two short lines for the legs go just below the belly here too, both pointing the same direction."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Layer the wing feathers and tail","text":"Inside the wing outline, draw three or four nested lines that follow the same diagonal shape. Each new line sits a little further back, like roof tiles, and connects up to the previous one. Those layered shapes read as flight feathers. Once the wing is full, extend a long line out past the body for the top edge of the tail, then bring it back forward to the wing to close the shape. A diagonal across the inside hints at tail feather separation."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Draw the feet and branch","text":"Time to perch the bird. Below each leg, draw a backwards C-shape that wraps under and meets a wiggly horizontal line - that line is the branch the bird is standing on. Add a small back toe curving around behind, and two front toes coming up over the top of the branch. Repeat on the second leg behind. The toes should look like they are gripping the wood, not floating above it. A second wiggly line parallel to the first gives the branch some thickness."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Add leaves and blossoms to the branch","text":"Stretch the branch up behind the bird so it disappears off the top edge of the page, then add a second wiggly line right next to it for the back side. Now cluster small leaves all along the branch. Each leaf is two short curves that meet at a point - draw them in pairs, then bunches of three or four. Sprinkle in some blossom shapes the same way. The video fast-forwards through this part because the goal is volume, not precision. Fill the branch until it looks full."},{"number":9,"title":"Step 9: Color the bluebird, belly, and branch","text":"Switch to colored pencils. Lay down ultramarine blue across the back, head, wing, and tail, then come back over it with a brighter true blue to add highlights. Color the belly and chest in a warm poppy red, leaving the very bottom belly area white. Use a cool gray for the beak, feet, and a touch of shading under the wing. Sienna brown does the branch. Pink and process red color the blossoms, spring green the leaves. Finish by smoothing the bird with a white pencil over the top."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-26T15:31:37.873Z","published":"2026-05-26T15:00:16.396Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}