


And this Procreate tutorial will break down the process into separate steps that will have you creating a scrumptious croissant masterpiece in no time. Luckily for you Procreate makes recreating telltale croissant characteristics in your drawing fun and easy. And a croissant – smooth, yet also quite textured, delicate but structural – makes for an interesting set of challenges for a realistic drawing. Food has long been a favourite subject for this very thing. Still life drawing uses non-living, everyday objects that are good at holding still, as subjects to practice drawing techniques like light and shadow, colour, shape and texture. What a delight!ĭeliciousness aside, a croissant is also a pretty interesting subject for a still life drawing. Obviously this assignment brought be great joy – seeking out the most visually appealing croissant I could find, drawing it, and then eating it. If there’s a food that needs no introduction, it’s a croissant. Toronto illustrator Mark Scheibmayr shares tips on how to draw a croissant. Creating illustrations of everyday things around your home, like a delicious croissant, with an Apple Pencil on iPad Pro, allows for new and advantageous ways of creating layers, texture, and dimension, and is also really quite fun. If you are new to digital drawing I am sure you’ll be amazed, both by how easy it is to pick it up, and by the new range of drawing potential it provides. Over the last few years the digital medium has become an important drawing tool for me and a integral part of my illustration process overall. I’m a Toronto illustrator who specializes in book illustration, portraiture, editorial illustration and exhibition design.

