Creative Life

20 Easy Doodle Flowers to Draw this Spring


Create charming journal pages with these 20 easy flower doodles to draw this spring and get fresh, creative ideas for seasonal art. From March and April to May, spring doodling flowers is a simple but genuinely beneficial practice. It gives your mind a gentle break while still keeping your creativity active, helping you slow down, focus, and let your thoughts flow more freely. Whether you’re filling a journal page or taking a quick moment to unwind, flower doodles make it easy to relax, express yourself, and reconnect with a sense of playfulness.


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20 Easy Doodle Flowers to Draw this Spring

The repetitive shapes of flower doodles can feel calming, almost meditative, and drawing something as universally uplifting as flowers naturally boosts your mood. Here are 20 easy, charming flower doodles you can draw in your art diary or journal this spring, each described in long, natural paragraphs that show you how to draw them and why they’re great for the season.


Simple Five-Petal Daisy

A classic five-petal daisy is one of the easiest spring doodles because it starts with a tiny circle and five rounded petals spaced evenly around it. Don’t worry about perfection. Slight unevenness makes it look hand-drawn and sweet. Fill the center with dots or cross-hatching for texture, and add a thin stem with a couple of oval leaves. This flower works well in corners of journal spreads or as a repeated border because it’s simple, recognizable, and instantly brings a light, sunny mood to your pages.


Long-Petal Wild Daisy

For a more expressive daisy, draw a small center again but surround it with long, thin petals that vary slightly in length. Let them overlap a bit for a natural look. Add a bent stem to give it movement. This doodle is perfect if you want something delicate and airy. Its loose lines feel like wildflowers blowing in a breeze, which is why it fits spring themes beautifully.


Tulip Silhouette

A tulip doodle starts with an elongated U-shape, then three pointed petals at the top: one in front and two peeking from behind. Add a tall, straight stem and two long leaves that wrap slightly around it. Tulips are great for journal pages because they look clean and elegant even when drawn quickly. Their shape also makes them ideal for repeating patterns or vertical dividers.


Blooming Rosebud

Roses can look complicated, but a rosebud doodle is wonderfully simple. Start with a teardrop shape, then add a couple of curved lines inside to imply folded petals. A short stem and two tiny leaves are enough to complete it. This doodle adds a romantic touch without the stress of drawing a full rose, and it’s perfect for marking special days or gratitude entries.


Open Rose Spiral

If you want something slightly more detailed, draw a small spiral for the center of the rose, then loosely build rounded petal shapes around it. Keep the shapes imperfect. It’s the looseness that gives it charm. Add a few leaves behind the bloom. This flower feels expressive and artsy, making it ideal for mood-tracking spreads or more decorative pages.


Bellflower Cluster

Bellflowers are drawn by sketching small upside-down bell shapes with softly flared rims. Add thin stems that connect to a main stem, and a few narrow leaves. These look lovely hanging from the side of a journal page. They bring a quiet, woodland vibe and work beautifully when you want something graceful and vertical.


Minimalist Lavender

Lavender doodles are deceptively simple: draw a straight stem, then add small oval or tear-drop shapes stacked closely along the top half. They don’t need to be perfectly lined up—slight randomness feels natural. Lavender’s slim silhouette makes it perfect for margins, habit trackers, and calm-themed layouts.


Cherry Blossom Trio

Draw a small circle, then add five softly pointed petals around it. At the base of each petal, draw a tiny line or dot to mimic real cherry blossoms. Group them in clusters of two or three on short branches. Cherry blossoms symbolize renewal, making them especially meaningful for spring journaling pages about goals or transitions.


Sunflower Head

Sunflowers look impressive but are easy when reduced to simple shapes. Start with a round center filled with dots, then surround it with two layers of pointed petals, one in front, one peeking from behind. Because sunflowers radiate positivity, they make great focal illustrations for monthly covers or days when you need a boost of brightness.


Tiny Forget-Me-Nots

These cute little blooms begin with a dot center and five small rounded petals. Scatter them loosely across a page or group them on a curved stem. Their small size makes them perfect for filling empty spaces and adding a gentle, sentimental touch to your layouts.


Anemone Outline

Anemones have wide, open petals. Draw a medium circle, then create five large, slightly wavy petals around it. Add a ring of dots inside the center to capture their distinctive look. The wavy lines give your journal a more artistic feel, and because anemones come in strong colors, they’re great if you love adding watercolor or markers.


Poppy With Ruffled Edges

Start with a wavy circle for the center, then draw large, ruffled petals flowing outward. The key is to let the lines move freely. No two petals need to match. Add a slim stem that bends slightly. Poppies bring emotion and softness to a page and work well in reflective spreads about personal growth or memories.


Hyacinth Bunch

Draw a long stem, then create a cluster of small oval or rounded shapes arranged tightly together to form the blossom. Add a couple of long, spear-shaped leaves at the base. This doodle has structure but still feels playful. Hyacinths add nice vertical balance when you want to break up horizontal writing on a page.


Simple Lotus

A lotus starts with a rounded triangle pointing upward, then layers of petals behind it, each becoming wider. The shape is clean and symmetrical, which makes it calming to draw. A lotus doodle is perfect for mindfulness pages, meditation logs, or self-care entries because it carries peaceful symbolism.


Little Marigold Puff

Sketch a small circle and surround it with a ring of short, semi-circular “ruffles.” Add a second ring behind to give it fullness. A marigold doodle is cute, compact, and cheerful. It’s great for borders or as small accents on daily pages.


Morning Glory Vine

Draw a simple trumpet-shaped flower by sketching a flared bell connected to a small circle. Add a trailing vine with heart-shaped leaves. This doodle brings movement and flow, perfect for wrapping around titles or decorating the edges of longwriting entries.


Magnolia Petals

Magnolia doodles begin with a teardrop-shaped center petal, then two wide petals behind it and two more partially visible at the sides. Because magnolias are large and elegant, they make strong cover illustrations for a spring-themed journal month.


Simple Snapdragon

Create a vertical stem, then add small rounded “bump” shapes climbing up along one side to mimic the clustered blossoms. Add a few narrow leaves. Snapdragons add quirky vertical interest and look great in botanical-themed pages where you want something different from typical blooms.


Tiny Dandelion Puff

Draw a small solid circle for the center, then surround it with long thin lines radiating outward. Add tiny dots at the ends of the lines for softness. A curved stem completes it. Dandelion puffs symbolize wishes and new beginnings, making them perfect for goal-setting or dream-tracking pages.


Swirling Flower Mandala

Start with a small center circle, then create simple petal shapes around it, gradually expanding outward with repeating patterns, like curves, dots, and teardrops. This doodle is easy because you can keep it as simple or elaborate as you want. It brings a meditative, grounding energy to your pages and is a lovely way to unwind while decorating.




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joanna ARTbyJWP

View Comments

  • What a delightful and uplifting collection! Your descriptions make each flower doodle feel approachable, calming, and full of springtime charm. I love how you blend creativity with mindfulness, showing that even the simplest sketches can brighten the mood and spark inspiration. Truly a lovely guide for anyone wanting to relax and let their imagination bloom. 🌸

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