5 Tips for Beautiful Coloring with Crayons - Ridge Light Ranch (2024)

We started creating our life-size paper bodies in science this week! Aren’t they cute? (These are our finished ones from three years ago!) Using the My Body book from Teacher Created Resources, we color a few different organs each week while we learn some interesting facts about each organ.

We have a fair number of young children in our community who aren’t reading yet, so I thought it would be nice to have a sample set of pre-colored pages from the My Body book for my tutors to show the class (…and I just like coloring.) I thought I could do this while helping my two sons with school last week, but they kept getting distracted! Instead of completing math sheets, they were watching me color and asking questions about how I was coloring. That’s when it occurred to me that I’d never really taught my kids how to color.

It seems kinda funny to think about “teaching” someone to color… Maybe I should instead say that I have never taught my children the secrets to making coloring with crayons look good.

I’ve also noticed that older elementary children often decide that crayons are for the little kids and not them. I think this must be because they’ve never learned any advanced crayon techniques.

This all convinced me that I should write up a few tips for making your coloring look really nice. The first two tips will work well for all ages and skill levels. The next three are best for students with more skill/experience. You can share these tips with your students and they’ll end up much more pleased with their own coloring work!

1. Always Color in a Consistent Direction

This is my #1 tip. It will make a bigger impact on the end result than anything else and any age can use it! The changes in direction, shown on the red kidney below, on the left side, are what make it look sloppy, even though I carefully stayed in the lines. Coloring in a consistent direction, as seen on the other kidney, is easier on the eyes and ends up looking very tidy!

If you have a corner or turn that makes it really awkward not to change direction, you can either color using curved lines or color using very small circles instead of lines. Just keep in mind that how you color will always be visible and will create the appearance of texture.

2. Color Outside the Lines Sometimes

In some circ*mstances, like this one, you can color outside the lines because you’ll cut the piece out afterwards. This allows you to use large consistent strokes, as you can see in the red kidney above and on the right. This is an especially helpful tip for younger students who are coloring the organs in this My Body project. (Just be sure not to use this tactic on the upper half of the heart in the My Body book because we won’t trim around all those veins and arteries.)

3. Consistent Pressure Gives a Uniform Look

Keeping a consistent pressure with the crayon on the paper gives a uniform, pleasing look. If you’re pressing hard, your hands will get tired quickly, so I prefer to press lightly. Interestingly, being aware of how much pressure you’re applying seems to be really hard for younger children. It must be tied to motor skills in some way. It won’t hurt anything to tell them this tip, but if they aren’t implementing it, just let it go.

4. A Variety of Pressure Creates Emphasis

If there are some areas you want to accent, you can press a little harder on the crayon and end up with a darker, more intense color. This is another good reason to color lightly for full coverage. For example, in this picture of the heart below, I pressed harder when tracing the lines within the heart and in the vein and artery openings. I did the same thing when coloring the muscles and the brain.

5. Overlap Colors to Create a Blended Look

Yes! You can overlap colors using crayons!

I like to lightly color the dominate color first and leave a bit of paper exposed for the wax of the second color to cling to. In the liver I colored (below), I started by coloring a layer of red, then I colored some brown on top. Then I colored more red over the top. I find this kind of layering to be really fun!

There you have it! Share these tips with your students and all they’re coloring will be beautiful! These are also great tips for coloring with erasable colored pencils!

5 Tips for Beautiful Coloring with Crayons - Ridge Light Ranch (2024)

FAQs

How to make crayons look better? ›

Vary the pressure on a crayon by pressing hard or lightly to create a deeper or lighter color. Vary the pressure in the same scene to create a sense of depth. Use light pressure to create shadows. Use heavy pressure to create visual dominance.

How do I make my coloring look better? ›

Use light pressure and overland your colors in the area they need to blend together, lessening your pressure as each color gets closer to the other. Add more layers, and a little more pressure, until you feel like you've got a smooth blend.

How to do perfect coloring? ›

Things You Should Know
  1. Color in the same direction and from the outside of the drawing in for the best results.
  2. Color shadows darker and highlights lighter to add depth and dimension to your drawing.
  3. Add more layers to darken colors instead of pressing down harder with your crayon or colored pencil.

How do you color crayons fast? ›

Another trick (that might seem really weird) is heating up your paper before coloring. I grab my art hair dryer or a heat tool and warm up an area of my drawing. While the drawing is still warm I use my crayons to color. The result is smooth and "melty" color that quickly covers and saturated the surface.

How do you make crayons shiny? ›

Using paper or foil liners gives the crayons a slightly more matte finish, whereas putting them straight in a pan usually yields a shinier crayon. You can make solid color crayons or mix up the colors for multi-colored ones.

What is crayon technique? ›

Crayon etching: A drawing made with crayons, where a heavy coat of black wash is applied. An etching tool is used to create patterns in the ink, removing the ink and allowing the crayon colors to appear.

What color makes you look prettier? ›

Sidhu and colleagues found that black and red clothing produced the highest ratings of body attractiveness and slimmer body size judgments. In contrast, grey and green clothes produced the lowest body attractiveness and highest body size assessments.

How to get better at coloring with markers? ›

Color from Light to Dark:

START LIGHT! You can always add more color and go darker, but you can't go to the opposite way. Color in the lightest shades first, then build up darker colors. Try to plan out highlights in advance and know which areas you're going to keep white (you can't erase marker!)

How to draw professionally with crayons? ›

10 Tips for Creating Fine Art with Crayons
  1. Use Crayola. ...
  2. Use a paper that will grip the color evenly. ...
  3. Have a good hand-held sharpener handy. ...
  4. Apply the crayon in a professional manner. ...
  5. Build your colors gradually, and layer them. ...
  6. Crayons can actually be more difficult to layer with due to the high wax content.

How do you color smoothly with Crayola colored pencils? ›

Hold the pencil sideways so the greatest area of the tip is in contact with the paper. This position allows you the control to lay down a very light base of color which you can then layer on top of until you have achieved the desired hue. It also allows for smooth color and minimizes unsightly lines.

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