How to Draw a Cat: Easy Step-by-Step Guide

Tutorial · 5 min read

Cats are one of the most-drawn creatures in the world, and the good news is you do not need any artistic skill to make one people instantly recognize. If you can draw a circle and a few triangles, you can draw a cat. Follow these six friendly steps and you will have a cute kitty in under a minute.

Step 1: Start With a Head Circle

Every simple cat begins with the head, so draw a rough circle in the middle of your page. It does not need to be perfect. A slightly squashed or wobbly circle actually looks more charming and hand-drawn. Keep it fairly large, because the face is where all the personality lives. Leave plenty of room below it for the body you will add later.

Step 2: Add Two Triangle Ears

On top of the circle, draw two triangles pointing upward, one on the left and one on the right. Space them apart so they sit near the corners of the head rather than the center. For an extra touch, add a smaller triangle inside each ear to suggest the inner ear. Triangles are what make a shape read as a cat instantly, so do not skip them.

Step 3: Draw the Eyes, Nose, and Mouth

Place two dots or small ovals in the middle of the face for eyes, keeping them close together for a cute look. Just below and between them, draw a tiny triangle for the nose. Then add a small curved line under the nose, splitting into two gentle curves like a soft letter W. That little smile turns your shapes into a friendly face.

Step 4: Sketch a Simple Body

Under the head, draw a rounded shape for the body. A simple oval or a soft rounded rectangle works perfectly. You can make the body sitting, with a wider bottom, or standing, longer and lower. Do not worry about legs and paws if you are drawing quickly; a rounded blob body reads clearly as a cat once the head and ears are in place.

Step 5: Curl a Tail

Add a long, curved line coming off one side of the body for the tail. A gentle curve or a soft question-mark shape gives your cat energy and movement. Make it fairly thick rather than a thin stroke, so it stands out. The tail is a small detail, but it is one of the fastest ways to signal "cat" to anyone looking at your drawing.

Step 6: Finish With Whiskers

Complete your cat with three short lines on each side of the nose for whiskers. Angle them slightly outward and downward so they fan out naturally. Whiskers are the finishing touch that removes any doubt about what you have drawn. If you have time, you can add a couple of stripes on the body or a small collar to give your kitty extra character.

Quick Tips for Drawing Games

In a fast game like Skivizko, speed matters more than detail, so draw the head and ears first, then the face, so guessers can start typing early. Since players see the number of letters and get gradually revealed hint letters, a clear silhouette helps them lock in the answer. Keep lines bold, skip tiny details, and lean on the brush and fill tools. A recognizable cat can earn you a thumbs up and quick points.

That is all it takes: a circle, two triangles, a friendly face, a body, a tail, and whiskers. Practice this a few times and you will be able to sketch a cat in seconds, whether you are doodling for fun or racing the clock in a round. Play Skivizko now →

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