Sight Words, Draw Pictures Part 4: How to Draw a Frog, Peacock, Puddles, and a lot more!

For our Sight Words, Draw Pictures Part 4, we're going to draw a frog, raindrops, peacock, and a lot more!

Expand your child's pool of words by learning Hindi words (pani, mor, ladki, and prem) while also teaching them how to draw using simple shapes.

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Learn more about Sight Words, Draw Pictures at Creativity School!


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What is Sight Words, Draw Pictures?

SWDP logo in Creativity School

Sight Words, Draw Pictures (SWDP) is one of our baseline courses for kids (K-2) at the Creativity School. 

The activities in SWDP help our students with basic shapes, the alphabet, letter sounds, small hand skills, and develop life skills like independence, comprehension, and curiosity.

With SWDP, kids will (1) learn sight words, (2) draw memorable characters using basic shapes, and (3) write funny stories with simple sentences.

Let's start!

Materials

  • 1 White sheet of paper
  • Pencil
  • Colored Pencil
  • Pen
  • Eraser

Instructions

List of words including frog, rain, water (pani), mud, jump, peacock (mor), girl (ladki), umbrella, splash, and love (prem).

Step 1. Look at the list of sight words.


For this activity, we’ll draw a frog, rain, water (
pani), mud, jump, peacock (mor), and umbrella!

Basic shapes including circle, square, triangle, rectangle, straight line, and curved line.

Step 2. Draw these basic shapes: a circle, a square, a triangle, a rectangle, a straight line, and a curved line.

Step 3. Draw animals and objects.

6 numbered illustrations to draw a frog

a. Let’s start with a frog!

  1. Draw a circle for the body.

  2. Draw googly eyes above the head.

  3. Draw curved lines for the jumping legs and ovals for the feet.

  4. Add straight lines on the jumping legs to divide them into upper and lower parts.

  5. Use small narrow rectangles for the arms and ovals for the hands.

  6. Erase the connecting lines. Draw a small circle for the eyeball, and draw a big smile and eyebrows for your cute frog!
a smiling frog basking in the rain with water and mud puddles around it.

b. Let’s draw raindrops, water puddles, and mud puddles! 


This is very easy!

For the rain, draw small lines that fall in one direction. 

For the water puddles, draw a curved line that forms into an irregular circle.

For the mud puddles, simply draw dark/black water puddles!

5 numbered illustrations to draw a jumping frog

c. Let’s draw a jumping frog!

  1. Draw an oval for the body.

  2. The direction of the jump is to the right. For the jumping legs, draw two connected rectangles, each on the left side of the body.

  3. For the arms, draw two rectangles on the right side of the body.

  4. Draw circles for the hands and feet.

  5. Draw two googly eyes, a smile, and little eyebrows for a cute finish!
6 numbered illustrations to draw a peacock

d. Let’s draw a peacock!

  1. Draw a reference circle for the peacock’s magnificent tail feathers.

  2. At the lower part of the reference circle, draw a small circle for the peacock’s body. Draw a small rectangle for the neck and an even smaller circle for the head. Lastly, draw the eye, beak, and feet.

  3. Draw lines from the body towards the reference circle.

  4. Connect the lines using curved lines or half circles. This will be the first set of feathers.

  5. Repeat steps 3-4 starting from the first set of feathers. This will be the second set of feathers.

  6. Draw the third set of feathers. Add circles with dots on the tip of each feather for the final design!
4 numbered illustrations to draw an umbrella.

e. Let’s draw an umbrella!

  1. Draw a ‘J’ shape for the handle.

  2. Draw a big half-circle for the canopy.

  3. Draw a small circle at the tip of the umbrella. Add curved lines around the canopy.

  4. Add details to the handle.
A smiling frog, a jumping frog, and a standing peacock on a rainy set-up

Step 4. Make a story from the words and the pictures.


Once you are done with the drawing, make a wonderful story using all the words on our list!

Tips for art-mazing success:

  • Continue drawing the other words in the list.
  • You can explore drawing your characters the way you want to!
  • Color your drawings. 
  • Add other things to your drawing and make a good story out of it.

Check out these awesome drawings by our young artists at the Creativity School.

Beautiful story and colorful artwork with images of frog, umbrella, peacock, girl, water droplets, and dark clouds
Beautiful story and colorful artwork with images of frog in a pond, a girl carrying an umbrella, and a peacock.

Did you have fun drawing animals and other stuff and learning about different foreign words? Let us know in the comment section below. 

Get your FREE printable guide here for quick and easy access to today’s activity!

Check also these awesome blogs to learn more about Sight Words, Draw Pictures!

SWDP Part 1: How to Draw a Monkey and a Zebra

SWDP Part 2: How to Draw People

SWDP Part 3: How To Draw Sea Creatures

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“Arree Chung, your class is fantastic! I am sure other parents would agree that Creativity School is more of a FAMILY DEAL! Because I, as a parent who has no drawing experience, learned too.”
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