Show your pet's personality in a portrait
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Create a pet portrait using drawing or painting that captures your pet’s personality; observe behaviors, choose colors and details, and explain your choices.

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Step-by-step guide to create a pet portrait that captures your pet's personality

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How to Make a DIGITAL PET PORTRAIT in Procreate Tutorial | Draw Dog with Multiple Colors on iPad

What you need
Adult supervision required, colouring materials such as crayons markers or washable paints, eraser, paintbrush cup of water and rag, paper or canvas, pencil, reference photo of your pet or your pet

Step 1

Gather all your materials and find a comfy spot to work.

Step 2

Spend five minutes quietly watching your pet and notice how it moves or acts.

Step 3

Write down three words that describe your pet’s personality.

Step 4

Pick one pose or expression that best shows those personality words.

Step 5

Lightly sketch the basic shapes of your pet and the chosen pose with your pencil.

Step 6

Add the pet’s facial expression and main features so the mood is clear.

Step 7

Choose three to five colours that match your pet’s personality.

Step 8

Write the names of your chosen colours on the edge of your paper.

Step 9

Fill in the large colour areas using your colouring materials or paints.

Step 10

Add texture and small details like fur lines eyes whiskers and any accessories.

Step 11

Let the paint or marker layers dry completely before touching them.

Step 12

Carefully erase any stray pencil lines left on your portrait.

Step 13

Write two short sentences explaining why you chose the pose the colours and the details.

Step 14

Sign and date your portrait in one corner.

Step 15

Share your finished creation on DIY.org

Final steps

You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

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Help!?

What can we use if we don't have paints or markers for the 'Fill in the large colour areas' step?

If you don't have paints or markers for the 'Fill in the large colour areas' step, use crayons, coloured pencils, watercolours, or cut-paper collage and remember to label your chosen colours on the paper edge as instructed.

My pet won't hold a pose and my colours keep smudging—how can I fix these problems?

If your pet won't hold a pose for the 'Pick one pose' and 'Lightly sketch' steps, take several quick photos or a short video to choose a clear frame to sketch from, and to prevent smudging follow the 'Let the paint or marker layers dry completely' step and build up colours in thin layers.

How can I adapt this portrait activity for different ages?

For younger kids simplify the 'Write down three words' to one word, use chunky crayons and tracing for the 'Lightly sketch' step and have an adult write the two short sentences, while older kids can add shading, mixed media in 'Add texture and small details,' and write a longer artist statement before signing and dating.

What are some ways to make the portrait more special or advanced after finishing the main steps?

To enhance and personalize the portrait, add a themed background showing the pet's favourite place, use mixed media like tissue or yarn for fur during 'Add texture and small details,' create a series of mood portraits, and then sign, date, and share the best ones on DIY.org.

Watch videos on how to create a pet portrait that captures your pet's personality

Here at SafeTube, we're on a mission to create a safer and more delightful internet. 😊

How to make a digital pet portrait from a photo | Cartoon your photos | Procreate tutorial

4 Videos

Facts about portrait drawing and painting for kids

🐱 Ancient Egyptians frequently depicted and even mummified cats because they were sacred and beloved.

🐾 Artists often use anthropomorphism (giving animals human traits) to show a pet’s personality in portraits.

🐶 Dogs can recognize human faces and often read our emotions from expressions and tone of voice.

🖼️ Portrait painting — of people and animals — goes back thousands of years to civilizations like Egypt and Rome.

🎨 Warm colors (reds, oranges, yellows) can make a pet look energetic, while cool colors (blues, greens) read as calm or shy.

How do I create a pet portrait that shows my pet's personality?

Start by observing your pet for 10–15 minutes and take photos or short videos to capture typical expressions and poses. Decide on a pose that shows personality (playful, sleepy, proud). Lightly sketch shapes to map proportions, then refine facial features and body language. Choose colors that match the mood—warm tones for energetic, cool for calm. Add small details (toys, favorite blanket) and write a one-sentence caption explaining your choices.

What materials do I need to make a pet portrait with my child?

You’ll need drawing paper or a small canvas, pencils and erasers for sketching, a set of paints (watercolor, acrylic, or gouache) or colored pencils/markers, brushes, a cup for water, a palette, and a rag. Also gather reference photos or a phone to record your pet, plus treats or toys to keep them engaged. Optional items: masking tape to hold paper, fixative spray, and a smock to protect clothes.

What ages is creating a pet portrait suitable for?

Suitable for ages 3 and up with adult support: toddlers (2–4) can make handprint or fingerpaint portraits focusing on colors and shapes; preschoolers (4–6) can pick colors and try simple facial features; school-age children (7–12) can work on proportions, shading and storytelling; teens can explore realistic techniques and mixed media. Adjust tools, supervision and complexity to match fine-motor skills and attention span.

What are the benefits of making a pet personality portrait with kids?

Making a pet portrait helps children develop observational skills, fine motor control, color and shape vocabulary, and emotional awareness by noticing behaviors. It builds empathy as kids reflect on a pet’s personality and encourages storytelling when they explain artistic choices. The activity boosts confidence through a finished project and creates a keepsake that strengthens the child–pet bond. Extend it by displaying the portrait or gifting it to family.
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