How to Draw a Volcano Step by Step

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Easydrawforkids

Easydrawforkids

Drawing a realistic looking volcano is a fun way to practice sketching landscapes and natural formations. With some simple shapes and careful detailing, anyone can create an erupting volcano drawing. In this complete guide, you'll learn how to draw a volcano step-by-step, from the initial sketch to the finishing details. Plus, get tips and tricks for making your volcano drawing as authentic as possible. Let's get started!

Introduction

Volcanoes are formed when hot molten rock, gases, and debris (lava, ash, rocks, etc.) erupt through openings or vents on the Earth's surface. Iconic in shape, most volcanic mountains have a conical form and crater at the top - however some shield volcanoes are more gentle in slope. When a volcano erupts, it spews out lava flows, poisonous gases, and ash that billows into the sky.

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Capturing the raw power and energy of an erupting volcano in a drawing may seem intimidating. However, it mostly involves sketching basic shapes. Once you understand how to construct the main volcano structure, the fun begins in bringing your creation to life with surface detail, smoke, bubbling lava and flowing magma.

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Follow along to learn how to draw a volcano step-by-step, from the initial outline to a dynamic finished piece. Let's get erupting!

Step 1: Sketching the Outline

To start your volcano drawing, first lightly sketch the basic overall shape in pencil. Most volcanic mountains have a conical or triangular form - wider at the base and tapering to a summit crater at the top.

 

Here are some tips for getting the initial outline right:

 

Shape

 

Draw an upside down triangle or cone that slightly leans to one side - this makes things more dynamic

 

Sketch jagged, bumpy edges - they don't have smooth straight sides

 

Include a circle crater space at the peak which will hold the erupting lava later on

 

Take your time at this early stage to map out the size and scene placement you want. Having an accurate initial outline is important, since details will be harder to change later on.

Step 2: Adding Details to the Volcano

Conveying Texture

 

Once you have finished the outline, you can start detailing areas to convey rocky and uneven terrain. Here are some key elements to include:

 

Layers

 

Draw staggered horizontal lines across the volcano to show different flows and layers of built up lava rock

 

Fissures

 

Sketch meandering cracks and crevices - these indicate flowing lava breaking open passages

 

Ledges

 

Add various protruding ledges around the volcano so it appears embedded into the landscape

 

Stones and Debris

 

Dot smaller to large rocks streaming down the exterior to depict past rock falls and accumulated rubble

 

Take your time when adding these surface details, darkening lines as you go over them again to illustrate texture. Vary the thickness and shapes to create visual interest.

Step 3: Drawing the Lava Flow

Lava pouring from the crater and running down the volcano side is essential for depicting an eruption. Here’s how to make lava flows look authentic:

 

Thickness

 

Show lava ranging from narrow streams to wide beds of thick moving lava. This variety will make things more dynamic.

 

Direction

 

Draw lava flows going multiple directions down the volcano in winding paths following cracks and openings you already sketched.

 

Leading Edge

 

At the foremost edge, quickly taper the lava flow into a narrow pointed edge to convey advancing movement.

 

Lava Texture

 

Build up texture by drawing the lava very rough with loads of bumps - lava has pasty chunky texture.

 

With these tips, your lava will look hot, dense and on the move!

Step 4: Adding Smoke and Ash

Billowing smoke, ash and poisonous gases are iconic aspects of an erupting volcano. Let’s make things more explosive by adding plumes:

 

Ash Clouds

 

Draw clusters of dark wavy lines or puffy smoke shapes rising from the crater to depict ash clouds

 

Smaller Plumes

 

Sketch random smoke trails drifting up from cracks and openings in the volcano’s surface

 

Size Variation

 

Create plumes in different sizes and shapes - thin whispy trails, big puffy clouds, tall columns

 

By varying the size, shape and density of ash clouds and smoke plumes your volcano will look like it’s actively erupting!

Step 5: Shading and Texturing

At this stage your volcano drawing already looks quite dynamic. Now let’s amplify things further with shading and textured details.

 

Tonal Shading

 

Use side angled hatching lines to cast shadows that give form to the conical shape

 

Lava Glow

 

Add an ambient glow effect around the thickest hot lava sections to make them appear illuminated

 

Surface Bumps

 

Shade small dots, ridges and recesses to increase surface irregularity

 

When texturing, keep your pencil sharpness varied too - both sharp and blunt sections will make things interesting.

Step 6: Finishing Touches

You’re in the home stretch! Here are some final touches to complete your masterpiece with a bang:

 

Foreground

 

Sketch a landscape featuring greenery being destroyed by embers and covered in ash

 

Figures

 

Draw small people and animals fleeing the eruption for an extra dramatic flair

 

Take a step back to look at your volcano drawing as a whole. Make any last minute improvements by darkening key lines and lightening any excess shading.

Tips and Tricks

Here are some extra tips for taking your volcano drawing talent even further:

 

Use colored pencils or paints to illustrate lava realistically

 

Try using grey and black paper for a grittier ashen scene

 

Draw different types of volcanoes like shield volcanoes or composite stratocone volcanoes

 

Sketch volcanoes from different angles like an aerial view

 

Depict various eruption styles - effusive eruptions with lots of lava or explosive eruptions shooting columns of black ash into the stratosphere

 

Practice drawing volcanoes erupting at night under a starry sky The possibilities are endless when unleashing the Earth’s explosive power on paper!

Conclusion

If you follow these drawing steps, you’ll have a vibrant erupting volcano masterpiece in no time! From the initial outline to finishing details like smoke plumes and lava texture, use these techniques to develop your creative landscape sketching abilities.

 

Drawing volcanoes is very rewarding, allowing you to recreate the beautiful yet destructive geological process on paper. Just remember - have the proper safety equipment before getting too close to a live volcanic eruption!

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