{"title":"How to Draw Mountains: Pencil Landscape Step by Step","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/crafts/how-to-draw-mountains","category":{"slug":"crafts","name":"Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"Cartooning Club Z","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3eZMCEDt8j5k-3FPxT056A","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OszDX5lBQmc"},"tldr":"Sketch a layered mountain landscape with one pencil. Beginner walkthrough covers peaks, ridges, snow caps, trees, and a soft water reflection.","totalDurationSeconds":843,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["2B graphite pencil","Drawing pencil set (HB-6B)","Pencil sharpener","Kneaded eraser","Blending stump"],"materials":["Sketchbook or drawing paper"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Sketch the Horizon Line and First Main Mountain","text":"Turn your sketchbook horizontal and draw a soft horizontal line low across the page. That is your horizon. It separates sky from ground and gives every later shape a home to sit on. Keep the pressure light.Now block in your first main mountain on the left side. Start at the top, then wobble a line down and across to suggest a ridge. The shape should feel a little lopsided. Real peaks are not symmetrical, and a too-clean triangle reads as cartoon, not landscape."},{"number":2,"title":"Stack Background Mountains Behind the Front Peak","text":"Working from the top of your first mountain, sketch the next ridge stepping up behind it with a few angled lines coming down. Then add another stack further back. Mountains get lower as your eye moves toward the right and into the distance, so let the peaks drop and the silhouette flatten.You are blocking in volume, not finishing yet. Loose, light angles read as a real mountain range. Resist the urge to commit any line until the whole composition is roughed in."},{"number":3,"title":"Add Foreground Mountain, Tree Line, and Water Edge","text":"Bring a smaller foreground mountain in along the right and a low hill across the left. Then drop in a soft tree line where the mountain meets the shore. These are quick spiky marks, not finished trees yet. The shoreline curves around an outcropping and back into a lake.Add a line across the bottom for the front edge of the lake. The water itself stays blank for now. Your eye reads the whole scene the moment those shoreline marks land, so you should already see the landscape forming."},{"number":4,"title":"Define Ridgelines and Mountain Character","text":"Switch to the tip of your pencil and lightly trace down the ridges of each mountain. These are the lines that run from each peak down toward the bottom, marking where the rock surface changes direction. Keep the marks wandering and slightly broken, not smooth.This is where the mountains get character. Sharp peaks read as alpine and dramatic; lower, rounder ridges read as older mountains. Vary them on purpose. A perfectly even row of peaks reads as a kid's drawing of mountains."},{"number":5,"title":"Build Pine Trees Along the Shore","text":"Start at the tip of each tree and pull short, angled branches down and outward. These are pine trees, so the silhouette tapers to a point at the top and widens toward the base. Offset each tree slightly. Don't make them all the same height.Closer to the water, darken the bases. Trees further back stay lighter and a little blurry, which makes them feel further away. You are building volume here, not detail. A cluster of suggestive trees beats a perfectly drawn single one."},{"number":6,"title":"Shade the Shadowed Sides of the Mountains","text":"Pick a sun direction in your head. Anything facing away from the sun gets shaded. Turn the pencil onto its side and lay soft tone down one whole face of each mountain, keeping the lit face nearly bare.Build the shading up in layers, not in one heavy pass. Two or three light layers blend more naturally than one dark scribble. Stop at the ridgeline. That hard edge between light and dark is what makes the mountain look three-dimensional instead of flat."},{"number":7,"title":"Add Snow Caps and Rock Layers Near the Peaks","text":"With the tip of your pencil, add short broken strokes along the ridges near each peak. Leave little patches of bare paper between the strokes. That bare paper reads as snow, the strokes as exposed rock between the snow.The mountains in the background get more snow than the ones in front, since they are taller and colder. Add a few horizontal cracks and crevices below the snow line on the closest peak. You don't need a lot. Three or four marks per ridge is enough to suggest a whole rock face."},{"number":8,"title":"Add Water Ripples and a Soft Mountain Reflection","text":"Drop in a few light horizontal marks across the lake to suggest ripples. They should be darker close to the shore and almost invisible near the center of the water. That gradient is what makes water look flat instead of textured.Mirror the bottom edge of the mountains and the trees into the water with very light pencil work, then smudge it with a finger to blur it out. Reflections are never as sharp as the real subject. Sign your work, step back, and call it done."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-22T14:12:09.706Z","published":"2026-05-22T14:11:53.719Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}