Use pencil textures to draw a ghostly scene, practicing shading, blending, and erasing to create glowing forms, soft shadows, and eerie atmosphere.



Step-by-step guide to draw a ghostly scene using pencil textures
Step 1
Gather your materials and clear a flat workspace with good light so you can see pencil marks clearly.
Step 2
Lightly sketch the main composition with an HB pencil by drawing where the ghosts the ground and any moon or trees will go.
Step 3
Choose and mark a tiny dot for your light source so you know which way the light falls.
Step 4
On scrap paper practice pencil textures by making a smooth shaded gradient a cross-hatch patch and a small stipple area to feel how each mark looks.
Step 5
Shade the ghost bodies with light circular strokes using the HB pencil to build a soft even tone.
Step 6
Gently blend the shaded ghost areas with your tissue or blending stump to create a soft glowing look.
Step 7
Darken the shadows behind and beneath the ghosts with a 2B or 4B pencil using soft directional strokes to anchor them to the ground.
Step 8
Use the kneaded eraser to lift tiny highlights inside the ghosts and to carve soft glowing edges.
Step 9
Add faint atmospheric smudges and distant trees or a moon with light HB marks and blend lightly to make the scene eerie and soft.
Step 10
Share your finished ghostly drawing on DIY.org so others can see your spooky pencil textures and glowing effects.
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
What can I use if I don't have a kneaded eraser or a blending stump?
If you don't have a kneaded eraser use a soft white eraser to lift highlights and if no blending stump gently rub with a clean tissue or a folded piece of cotton to blend the shaded ghost bodies and faint smudges.
My ghosts look flat or my highlights disappeared after blending—what should I do?
Use the kneaded eraser to lift tiny highlights inside the ghosts, then reapply light circular HB strokes and blend sparingly to restore the soft glowing look described in the instructions.
How can I adapt this activity for different age groups?
For younger kids simplify by pre-drawing ghost shapes and having them practice the smooth shaded gradient and light circular HB strokes with a tissue for blending, while older kids can practice cross-hatch and stipple on scrap paper and add 2B/4B directional shadows and kneaded-eraser highlights for more depth.
How can we extend or personalize the ghostly scene after finishing the basic drawing?
Enhance the scene by adding a pale colored-pencil halo before blending to deepen the glow, intensifying the 2B/4B shadows for mood, and photographing the finished piece to share the glowing effects on DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to draw a ghostly scene using pencil textures
Facts about pencil drawing techniques
✏️ Pencils actually contain graphite, not lead — the old name “lead” just stuck around.
🫧 Blending stumps (tortillons) are simple rolled-paper tools that smooth pencil marks into soft, velvety textures.
🖤 Chiaroscuro, the dramatic use of light and shadow, was a favorite technique of Rembrandt to make scenes feel moody and alive.
💡 Kneaded erasers can be shaped like tiny sculpting tools to lift graphite and make glowing highlights without harsh edges.
👻 Sfumato, a soft smoky blending technique used by Leonardo, helps create ghostly, atmosphere-filled transitions.


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