Posted by Isabel Bennett
5 days ago

What’s a good way to start drawing every day if I only have 20 minutes?

Years ago I doodled for fun, and now I want to build a steady drawing habit. I can spare about 20 minutes most evenings, and my space is a small desk with paper and pencils only. I'm aiming to improve line control and simple shading, not full pieces. A light routine or mini-curriculum would help keep me consistent. What would a week of short sessions look like, and how should I track progress? Bonus if it stays enjoyable so I don't burn out. (Details: small budget, limited time, and I'd prefer simple over perfect.)

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Ruth Martin avatar
Ruth Martin 66 rep
4 days ago
Top Answer

Hey Isabel. Starting a daily drawing habit with just 20 minutes is totally doable and especially since you're focusing on basics like line control and shading. Keep it simple with your paper and pencils, and aim for consistency over perfection. Begin each session with a quick warm-up, like scribbling loose circles for a minute to loosen your hand. Then dive into the main exercise, and end with a fun doodle to keep things light. For a week's routine, try this: On day one, practice straight lines by drawing rows of them at different speeds, noticing how steady you get. Day two, work on curves, like arcs or waves, filling a page with variations. Day three, combine them into simple shapes, such as cubes or spheres with basic outlines.

Day four, introduce shading by hatching lines on those shapes to add depth. Day five, focus on cross-hatching for more texture, maybe on a quick apple sketch. Day six, blend techniques with a small still life, like shading a pencil on your desk.

Day seven, review the week by redrawing something from day one and comparing. To track progress, date each page in your sketchbook and jot a quick note on what felt better, like 'lines are smoother today.' This keeps it enjoyable without pressure, and seeing small wins will motivate you. If a day feels off, just doodle something silly like a cartoon face to end on a high note.

Ember King avatar
Ember King 🥉 138 rep
5 days ago

Squeezing in 20 minutes between diaper changes and Zoom calls feels like winning the lottery sometimes. I'd say kick off each session with a quick warm-up of scribbling loose lines and circles to get that hand steady and then dive into shading simple stuff like spheres or cubes for the rest of the time - keep it fun by drawing goofy faces on them. Track your progress by snapping a pic of each day's doodle on your phone and jotting a note like 'lines less wobbly today,' so you see the wins without overthinking it.

Adding one thing - Love the warm-up idea - make it specific: 5 minutes of straight lines ellipses, and ghosted strokes; 5 minutes of value scales and hatching; 10 minutes on one simple object with only 2–3 values but then... rotate themes across days (boxes/perspective, cylinders/ellipses, textures, cross-contour) so it stays varied without extra planning. Track by dating each page and redrawing the same benchmark subject every Sunday for 10 minutes under the same light, then add a one-line note about what improved. To keep it fun, stop on a win and toss in tiny constraints now and then, like only straight lines or an overhand grip.

Rowan Zhang avatar
Rowan Zhang 44 rep
5 days ago

Hi Isabel, day one focus on straight lines repeating horizontal vertical and diagonal for ten minutes then shade a square. Day two do curves and circles warming up then shade a sphere. Day three combine lines into basic shapes like triangles and shade them lightly. Day four observational drawing of a simple object like a mug using lines and shading. Day five repeat favorites from earlier days to build confidence. Track by keeping a notebook with dated entries noting improvements in control and shading consistency.

Nathan Nelson avatar
Nathan Nelson 38 rep
3 days ago

By the time the kids crash and emails stop, I get a 20 minute window while the dishwasher screams. Keep it stupid simple and cheap so you actually sit down because fancy setups die on day three. Set a 5–10–5 timer split: ghosted and straight lines and boxes and ellipses & then shade one sphere or cube. Date each page and snap a weekly photo so you can spot cleaner lines without obsessing.

Ruby Rogers avatar
Ruby Rogers 0 rep
3 days ago

Use a fixed 20 minute split: 5 warmup, 10 focused drill, 5 quick shading. Mon lines with a shaded sphere, Tue ellipses and cylinders with a shaded cylinder, Wed boxes with a shaded cube. Thu contour simple household objects and shade one form, Fri value scales and smooth gradations. Sat one-page study combining lines, ellipses, and boxes, Sun review and redo your two weakest drills. Track by dating each page and writing drill counts at the top, then do a 60 second weekly flip to compare day 1 to day 7. Stop at 20 minutes to protect consistency.

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