Delineation flowers can be a useful hang-up for a commencement artist to memorize. While illustration flowers in fact can be knotty, most flowers can be stressed in a manageable presentation using basic shapes and minimal pencil strokes. By practising sketch some of these no sweat flowers, you can make enticing sketches while bettering your picture skills.
Generic Flower
Haul a path along the top of the U shape with a slight curve to it, then add random squiggly lines to give the appearance of closed petals. Draw a few thorns along the stem to finish it off.
Tulip
Drawing a closed tulip is as easy as drawing a closed rose.Rose
While an expansive rose can be challenging to haul over of all the lines needed for the folds of the petal, a closed rose can be done with no problem lines. A stem with a U shape on top of it represents the basic closed rose.Nearly anyone can compose a generic flower. It is composed of one substantial circle (the bud) with various smaller circles encompassing it to symbolize the petals. Locate those circles on top of a stem, haul an elongated oval shape on either side of the stem, and you enjoy a basic flower.
The basic shape for the tulip is similar to that of a closed rose. What distinguishes the tulip from the rose is the lines that represent the closed petals. On either side of the U-shaped flower, draw a slightly curved vertical line that extends from the stem to the top of the flower, creating petals that will appear as if they are closed.
Sunflower
A sunflower consists of a stem with a round circle on top of it that represents the bud. Around the bed are petals that resemble exclamation points. An elongated oval shape on either side of the stem represents leaves. Drawing is sunflower is almost like drawing a generic flower, except the petals are not circles.