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🎨 Drawing & Crafts

How to Draw a Christmas Tree

Step-by-Step Guides for Kids, Beginners & Artists

Whether you are drawing with a five-year-old, making your own Christmas cards, or just want to fill a sketchbook page with something festive, this guide has you covered. Inside the studio below you will find three complete tutorials: a super-simple version that takes under five minutes, a decorated version with baubles and lights, and a more realistic version for confident artists. All you need is a pencil and paper.

🎨 3 tutorials 📏 Easy to Advanced ⏱ 5-30 min 🖨️ Free printable worksheets 👶 Ages 4 to adult

Interactive Drawing Studio

Draw Along Step by Step

Switch between three drawing styles, focus on one step at a time or open the full tutorial, animate the newest lines, preview different colour palettes, and print practice sheets without leaving the page.

What You'll Draw

Preview

Colour Inspiration

Colour Schemes for Your Christmas Tree

Three palettes to make your tree look traditional, snowy, or boldly cartoonish.

Scheme 1: Traditional Christmas

Deep greens, warm golds, and rich baubles for a classic Christmas card look.

Element Colour Hex
Tree body Deep forest green #1B5E20
Tree highlights Bright green #4CAF50
Trunk Warm brown #795548
Star Gold #FFD700
Baubles Red, blue, gold #F44336 / #1565C0 / #FFD700
Background Deep navy #0D1B2A

Scheme 2: Winter Wonderland

Pale icy tones, silver ornaments, and cool highlights for a frosty sketchbook feel.

Element Colour Hex
Tree body Icy blue-green #4DB6AC
Tree highlights White #FFFFFF
Trunk Silver-grey #90A4AE
Star Silver-white #E0E0E0
Baubles White, silver, pale blue #FFFFFF / #B0BEC5 / #81D4FA
Background Pale blue-grey #ECEFF1

Scheme 3: Colourful & Cartoon

Bright greens, hot pink accents, and rainbow decorations for cheerful classroom art.

Element Colour Hex
Tree body Bright lime green #76FF03
Tree highlights Yellow-green #CCFF90
Trunk Orange-brown #FF6D00
Star Hot pink #FF4081
Baubles Rainbow mix Various
Background White or pale yellow #FFFDE7

Artist Notes

Tips for Drawing Christmas Trees

Professional tricks that make a real difference, whether you are sketching a card or teaching a class.

The Most Common Mistakes (and How to Fix Them)

1. Making the tree too symmetrical

Real Christmas trees are slightly asymmetrical. Let one side be a little fuller than the other. Let some branches droop more than others. Imperfection often reads as realism.

Fix: After sketching, deliberately add one longer branch on one side.

2. Forgetting the interior shadows

A flat green silhouette looks like a triangle, not a tree. The interior of a tree is darker because branches overlap and block the light.

Fix: Add darker shading toward the trunk and beneath overlapping layers.

3. Baubles that look flat

A plain circle coloured solid red stays a plain circle. Decorations need highlights and a darker edge to feel rounded.

Fix: Leave a small highlight and add a darker shadow on the opposite side.

4. Placing decorations too evenly

Perfect spacing feels rigid. Decorated trees look more convincing when clusters and gaps vary.

Fix: Group some ornaments together and leave a few quiet areas.

5. Making the star too small

The topper is the focal point. If it disappears, the tree loses its finishing note.

Fix: Make the star slightly bigger than you first think it should be.

Quick Reference: Lines to Know

Line Type What It Draws How to Make It
Zigzag Pine needle texture Short diagonal strokes alternating direction
Wavy Branch edges, tinsel Gentle connected S-curves
Curved diagonal Individual branches Start thick, taper to a point
Hatching Shadow areas Parallel diagonal lines, closer means darker
Cross-hatching Deep shadows Two layers of hatching crossing each other
Stippling Soft texture Small dots, denser means darker

Printable Practice

Printable Christmas Tree Drawing Worksheets

Download and print simple practice sheets for the classroom, the kitchen table, or a holiday craft station.

Worksheet 1: Simple Tree Practice Sheet

Includes a six-cell practice grid with faint triangle guides so younger artists can repeat the basic stacked-tree structure again and again.

  • Best for kindergarten and early primary ages
  • A4 portrait, black-and-white friendly
  • Perfect for crayons, felt tips, and quick warm-up drawing

Worksheet 2: Step-by-Step Reference Sheet

Pairs the decorated-tree steps with thumbnail references and blank space beside each one, so learners can study and copy without switching between screens.

  • Best for older children, club sessions, and guided classroom demos
  • A4 portrait, black-and-white ready
  • Designed for side-by-side observation and practice

Worksheet 3: Blank Decorated Tree Outline

Offers a clean decorated-tree outline ready for colouring, shading practice, or classroom contests where everyone starts from the same base drawing.

  • Suitable for all ages
  • A4 portrait, colouring-book style layout
  • Great with coloured pencils, markers, or mixed media

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers for parents, teachers, first-time sketchers, and anyone making Christmas card art.

How do you draw a simple Christmas tree for kids?

Draw a triangle, then add two wider triangles below it so they overlap slightly. Add a rectangle trunk, a star on top, and colour the tree green with a brown trunk and yellow star. It can be done in under five minutes.

What is the easiest way to draw a Christmas tree?

The easiest method is the three-triangle approach: stack three triangles, add a trunk, and place a star on top. It is fast, recognisable, and forgiving for complete beginners.

How do you draw a realistic Christmas tree?

Start with a light triangle guideline, then block in irregular branch masses from the bottom up. Build overlapping branch clusters, add pine-needle texture, and deepen the shadows near the trunk so the tree feels full and three-dimensional.

What supplies do I need to draw a Christmas tree?

A pencil and paper are enough to begin. For colouring, add green and brown pencils or markers plus yellow or gold for the star. An eraser helps at the sketch stage, and a darker pencil is useful for realistic shading.