How to Draw Weather: Cute Doodles for Sun, Rain, Snow and More!
Do you like to keep track of the weather in your bullet journal or planner? I do, but sometimes I get bored using the same old icons every day.
So, I rounded up a bunch of how to draw weather videos!
You’ll find doodles for almost every type of weather including sun, snow, rain, clouds, wind, hot, cold, rain, rainbows, tornados, and even hail.
If you want to go all out, you can even create weather lettering as you’ll see in video #7.
Are you into cute kawaii doodles? Then you’ll love videos #3 and 5.
After the videos, you’ll find lots of inspiration for how to use weather icons in your bullet journal!
How to Draw Weather Videos
#1. Colorful Weather Doodles
Splendid Scribbles shows us how to create cute and colorful weather doodles including sun, wind, rain, moon and stars, temperature, lightning, snow, wind sock, snowman, rainbow, tornado, clouds, snow, umbrella, partly sunny, and sunglasses.
The doodles are drawn with Micron pen and then filled in using colored pencils.
I think these doodles would look great on daily pages or filling up an entire monthly calendar spread using just weather doodles.
#2. Weather Doodles from California
Cindy Guentert-Baldo, a fellow California, created weather doodles in a land where we don’t see much snow. As the title of her video says, “I don’t believe in snow” but she received a request from one of her viewers for weather doodles.
The doodles include sprinkles, rain, heavy rain, umbrella, breezy, windy, tornado, lightning, sleet, cold, snow, rainbows, and humidity.
She has a great sense of humor and creates really simple and quick-to-draw doodles using a Papermate Flair Marker.
#3. Traditional with a Twist
Doodles by Sarah uses a Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Black Marker to create these adorable weather doodles. She always packs SO MANY DOODLES into every one of her videos.
The first 12 doodles feature a thermometers surrounded by various weather icons. They are handy because you could actually color in the thermometer to show the temp of the day.
The next 14 doodles are traditional weather icons while the remaining doodles are umbrellas, snow boots, scarf, and sunglasses.
#4. Easy Weather Doodles
The Petite Planner is another one of my favorite doodles so I looked to her when I wanted to know how to draw weather. What I really love about these 23 doodles is that while the are traditional, the are super easy to draw and have a cuteness about them. They add a bit of style to your page without being overly cute.
She also uses a Faber-Castell Pitt Artist Black Marker when creating these doodles.
#5. Kawaii Weather Doodles
If you love adding cute faces on everything in your life, then you’ll love this weather icons video from Idle Doodle.
Every single weather doodle features an adorable face including showers, sun, rainbow, thunder/lightning, clear night, and more!
#6. Everyday Weather Icons
I’ve been following Bohoberry’s blog and YouTube channel for years. One of the things I love about her bullet journal daily pages is that she always records the weather.
In this video she shows you how to draw the weather icons she uses every day using the Fiber-Castell Pitt Artist black marker.
#7. Weather Fonts
This is a really fun video from Doodles by Sarah. She takes weather conditions and turns them into really cute fonts that you can make, too!
Learn how to make decorative weather and seasonal fonts for rainy, humid, snowy, sunny, cloudy, windy, thunderstorm, heatwave, cold, hot, winter, spring, summer, and fall.
Weather Doodle Ideas for Your Bullet Journal
This monthly weather tracker from @lana_makes provides a box for each day of the month. The box has enough space for a weather icon and the temperature.
Use a small portion of your bullet journal weekly spread to keep track of the weather and temperature just like this minimalist one from @bujoncoffee. A simple Weather header tops the section along with the first letter for each day of the week.
Use a year in pixels to track the temperature! I know that all of the videos showed weather icons, but I think this weather tracker is worth noting. The grid was created with all of the months across the top of the grid. The days of the month are marked down the left side of the grid.
A large temperature gauge shows colors for temperature for easy reference. Then each day of the year is filled in with the appropriate color for the temperature that day.
I love this bright and sunny monthly weather tracker from @bulletjournaldesires. It’s just like a typical bujo monthly page but instead of important dates and meetings, it records the weather.
@Nayobujo’s weather tracker is similar to the previous tracker, however, this spread takes up two pages instead of one. Simple weather doodles note the forecast for each day of the month. A pink highlighter was used to accent the dates.
Most bullet journal pages are filled with lines and boxes. This colorful weather tracker from @my.bujopage doesn’t use either and provides a lovely minimalist bujo page. Each day of the month has the temperature and weather for a very satisfying completed page.
I really like how the daily weather forecast and temperature are recorded in this weekly spread by @medstudent_bujo. The weather is smack in the middle of every day and accented with bright yellow lines to divide the days of the week.
The last bullet journal weather spread reminds me of iPhone apps. Designed by @_ninacreates, this monthly spread features boxes that are slightly rounded (like apps). Each box has enough space for a weather icon and the temperature.
Will you be using weather doodles in your planner or bullet journal? Let me know in the comments below!