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30+ Easy Flower Doodles Practice Pack (Free Printable Templates)

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Last Updated on May 5, 2026 by Dee

If you’ve been looking for cute, beginner-friendly flower doodle templates that don’t take an art school degree to enjoy — you’re in the right spot. I’ve made a free printable pack with 30 Easy Flower Doodles Practice Pack for you, and the rest of this post is really just a love letter to flower doodles and how easy they can be when you start with a tracer.

Pop your email in below to grab the free pack — and if you fancy, keep scrolling for 8 ideas you can try right away using the templates inside.

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30 Easy Flower Doodles to Practice — sketchbook

Why Flower Doodles Are the Perfect Beginner Subject

Honestly, flower doodles are forgiving. The shapes are simple, the lines are gentle, and there’s no pressure to make it look photorealistic. Flower Doodles want to look a little wonky — that’s the charm. So if you’ve been hesitant to put pen to paper because you don’t feel “good enough” yet, this is the pack to start with.

What You Need to Get Started

Honestly, very little. A printer, A4 paper, and any pen you love. If you want to take it further, a small watercolour set will turn the templates into proper pieces. I use my Winsor & Newton Cotman set most days — it’s the one I’d buy again in a heartbeat.

This post contains affiliate links — if you grab something I love, I might earn a tiny commission at no cost to you. I only mention things I actually use.

8 Flower Doodle Drawing Ideas to Try

Here are 8 of the flower doodles inside the pack — pick whichever one matches your mood. There’s no order to follow.

1. Simple Daisy

A five-petal daisy with a round centre and tiny leaves. This one’s a sweet starting point because the shape is simple and the personality comes through in the smallest details — a tiny smile, a curl of antenna, a little wobble in the line. Trace the outline, then add your own colour palette.

2. Rose Doodle

A swirly cartoon rose with leaves, drawn in a single confident loop. This one’s a sweet starting point because the shape is simple and the personality comes through in the smallest details — a tiny smile, a curl of antenna, a little wobble in the line. Trace the outline, then add your own colour palette.

3. Tulip

A single tulip with three rounded petals on a curved stem. This one’s a sweet starting point because the shape is simple and the personality comes through in the smallest details — a tiny smile, a curl of antenna, a little wobble in the line. Trace the outline, then add your own colour palette.

4. Sunflower

A sunflower with a tall stem, small leaves, and a smiling centre. This one’s a sweet starting point because the shape is simple and the personality comes through in the smallest details — a tiny smile, a curl of antenna, a little wobble in the line. Trace the outline, then add your own colour palette.

5. Lavender Sprig

A slim lavender stem with little budded flowers along it. This one’s a sweet starting point because the shape is simple and the personality comes through in the smallest details — a tiny smile, a curl of antenna, a little wobble in the line. Trace the outline, then add your own colour palette.

6. Sweet Pea

A curving stem with three sweet pea blooms and fine leaves. This one’s a sweet starting point because the shape is simple and the personality comes through in the smallest details — a tiny smile, a curl of antenna, a little wobble in the line. Trace the outline, then add your own colour palette.

7. Forget-Me-Not

A tiny five-petal forget-me-not flower in a small cluster. This one’s a sweet starting point because the shape is simple and the personality comes through in the smallest details — a tiny smile, a curl of antenna, a little wobble in the line. Trace the outline, then add your own colour palette.

8. Dandelion Puff

A dandelion seed head with little floating seeds drifting away. This one’s a sweet starting point because the shape is simple and the personality comes through in the smallest details — a tiny smile, a curl of antenna, a little wobble in the line. Trace the outline, then add your own colour palette.

30 Easy Flower Doodles to Practice — watercolor

How to Take Your Flower Doodle Drawings Further

Once the line art is dry, layer soft watercolour washes — pastel sage green, dusty blush, a hint of buttercup yellow. Or colour straight in with markers. The templates are designed for both, so use whichever feels easiest today.

If you’d like more printable packs like this, I add new ones every month inside the Artsydee Patreon — full back catalogue plus fresh templates each month. It’s the easiest way to keep your sketchbook stocked without me having to invent a new freebie every week.

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FAQ

Are these templates really free?

Yes — pop your email in above and I’ll send you the full pack as a PDF. No catches, no hidden steps.

Can I print these on regular paper?

Yep. A4 standard printer paper works perfectly. If you want to add watercolour washes, switch to thicker paper (140lb cold press is what I use).

What if I’ve never drawn before?

That’s actually who these are for. Trace first, copy second, invent third. Confidence builds itself.

Final Thoughts

Trace one. Just one. Pick a flower doodle you like, run a pen over the lines, and see what happens. The templates do the heavy lifting so all you have to do is show up.

🎬 Want to see techniques in action? Subscribe to my YouTube channel for weekly art tutorials.

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30 Easy Flower Doodles to Practice — Pinterest pin

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