How To Draw Pears Step by Step Procreate Tutorial

Looking to perfect your still-life drawing game? This easy Procreate tutorial is here to help! Read along for a simple yet comprehensive step-by-step guide on how to draw pears digitally using iPad Pro.

Digital drawing continues to thrive as an exciting medium in the world of art. Many famous illustrators have created truly remarkable work using Procreate on iPad Pro, and now it’s your turn to try out the amazing tools this artistic medium has to offer.

This realistic pear drawing Procreate tutorial will break down the process of illustrating on a tablet and set you up with the basics of this amazing app. We’ll use how to draw a pear as our example!

How to Draw Pears: Drawing on iPad

I’m a Toronto illustrator who specializes in book illustration, portraiture, editorial illustration and exhibition design. 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.

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. Creating illustrations of everyday things around your home, like a pear, 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.

Toronto illustrator Mark Scheibmayr shares tips on how to draw pears.
Toronto illustrator Mark Scheibmayr shares tips on how to draw pears.

Sketch A Pear Drawing In The Kitchen

One of the best ways to become an expert on how to draw pears is by visiting your local farmers market. At my favourite farmers market in Toronto there is an urban farmer who grows beautiful heritage varieties.

Pears are fruits produced and consumed around the world, growing on a tree and harvested in the Northern Hemisphere in late summer into October. The tree is medium-sized and native to coastal and mildly temperate regions of Europe, North Africa, and Asia.

About 3000 known varieties of pears are grown worldwide, which vary in both shape and taste. The fruit is consumed fresh, canned, as juice, or dried.

We suggest purchasing a variety of pears for your drawing. Popular pear varieties include Anjou, Bartlett, Bosc, Comice, Concorde, Forelle and Seckel.

A diversity of colours, shapes and textures helps make a still life fruit portrait more interesting. Be sure to arrange the pears on your kitchen counter to photograph in ample natural light.

You’ll of course need to eat up those pears once you’re finished drawing so why not cook one of our popular pear recipes?

Some of our favourites include Ginger Whiskey Pear Cocktail, Toasted Pecan Parmesan Pear and Rocket Salad, Cambozola Currant Pear and Fennel Salad, Creamy Vegetarian Parsnip and Pear Soup, Ginger Spiced Banana Pear Muffins, and Creamy Apple and Pear Pork Normandy.

Pear Drawing Procreate Tutorial

To me, a pear is a fruit you can count on. Really has its act together. Hearty, unpretentious and elegantly understated in flavour. Pears also seem to come in an impressive diversity of colours. From green, to yellow, rusty orange, and even brown. How many brown fruits do you know?

Pears are also what tend to come to mind for me when thinking of classic still life drawing or painting. Perched somewhere near the top if an elaborate fruit bowl.

And there are plenty of reasons why pears make a brilliant subject for still life drawing. Still life drawing utilizes non-living, everyday objects that are good at holding still, as subjects to practice drawing techniques like light and shadow, colour, shape and texture.

Not only do pears have a unique and pleasing shape, but their skin is dotted, scratched, multi-coloured and just bursting with interesting detail upon closer examination.

Luckily for you Procreate makes recreating telltale pear features in your drawing fun and easy. And this procreate tutorial on how to draw pears will break down the process into separate steps that will have you creating a still life pear masterpiece in no time.

Not to mention, the Procreate methods you’ll practice using in this tutorial will create the benefit of adding many exciting new tools to your art arsenal!

Learn the process of creating a digital pear drawing with Procreate on iPad Pro.
Learn the process of creating a digital pear drawing with Procreate on iPad Pro.

Procreate Tutorial: How to Draw Pears with iPad Pro

Let’s first get set up with a new canvas in Procreate. When you first open the app you’ll be in the “gallery” where all of your artworks will be visible. Tap the “+” in the top right of the screen and a menu will appear where you can select your canvas size.

To choose your dimensions click “create custom canvas” and enter them (in mm, cm, inches, or pixels). You can simply select “screen size,” however I recommend going bigger so that you have the option to print your finished piece with a nice resolution.

For my mountains drawing I’ve created a 11″ x 14.5″ canvas. I’ve gone with a resolution of 300 DPI, which allows for up to 35 layers. If you go too big the maximum number of layers you can have in your artwork can be too few for our purposes, this is a good size.

Procreate Tutorial: this toolbar features the most frequently used drawing tools
Procreate Tutorial: this toolbar features the most frequently used drawing tools

Now it’s important to explore and familiarize yourself with Procreate’s basic tools. Starting with the toolbar on the top right of your canvas.

  • The Brush Tool: This is the tool with which you draw/paint. Tap it to open your Brush Library. Procreate’s brushes are categorized in a list down the left side of the drop down menu. Tap any of these to see your brush options in each category. Choose what you like and then tap the brush icon in the toolbar again to close the menu. Now get scribbling! Try a few different brushes and use different pressures and angles of the Apple Pencil – it’s remarkably realistic in its response to your hand.
  • The Eraser Tool: It does exactly what you think it does! Tap it and you’ll open an identical Brush Library as tapping the brush tool. Try a few and see how it erases your scribbles.
  • The Colour Tool: This is your colour palette. Tap and it will open in its default view of “Disc.” Use the outer wheel to select colour, and the inner circle to select lightness/darkness. Or you can use the square view that combines the two. When you’ve chosen the colour you want to use, tap the colour icon in the toolbar again to close the menu. Again, do some scribbling! Choose a variety of brush and colour combinations to get a feel for the colouring process.
  • The Smudge Tool: This is used to blend colours and create gradients. This tool has the same effect as taking your finger to pencil on paper and rubbing it to blend. The smudge tool mimics the real thing fairly well but it does take some getting used to.
  • The Layers Tool: You can use this menu to create multiple layers on your canvas, and select between them. How to do this, and the benefits of layers, will be best understood by following through my own example here in this Procreate tutorial.
Realistic Potato Drawing: brush size and brush opacity sliders are also important tools.
Realistic Pear Drawing: brush size and brush opacity sliders are also important tools.

Then there are the slider toolbars on the left side of your canvas.

  • Brush Size: The top slider. Tap, hold and move up and down to adjust the size of your brush tip. A preview window will open up to help guide you. This slider is used for your brush, smudge and eraser tools in the same way.
  • Brush Opacity: The bottom slider. This works the same way as the brush size slider, but is for brush opacity.
  • Undo/Redo: Under the sliders you’ll see these two buttons. Tapping the undo button will undo the last stroke you drew/erased. Vice versa with the redo button. This is a very useful tool you’ll probably use a lot. You can also undo by tapping once anywhere on your canvas with two fingers.

There is also the toolbar in the top left of your canvas. For these tools I will point them out and explain them along the way as we need them.

Learning how to draw pears digitally is easy with Procreate on iPad Pro.
Learning how to draw pears digitally is easy with Procreate on iPad Pro.

How to Draw Pears Step One: Choosing a Reference Photo

If you can take your reference photo yourself, great. You can use the iPad itself to capture a good photo.

If you don’t have any pears handy, there are plenty of images online for you to choose from. It’s a good idea to chose one that is copyright free and there are several websites that have large libraries of free images.

I took my reference image myself in my kitchen. I included two Bosc pears, which I chose because they had a deep rusted colour with hints of green and yellow and a heavily spotted pattern – lots of fun details to draw.

I kept one whole and cut another one into a couple of pieces to include the interior texture as well. I arranged them in a spot where they were well-lit and that I could take a nice clear photo that captured some of the glistening quality of the fruit flesh.

Procreate tutorial: take your own reference photo using the camera on iPad Pro.
Procreate tutorial: take your own reference photo using the camera on iPad Pro.

The first thing to do before you get to drawing is setting up your reference photo to work from. A great option with iPad Pro is that you can keep your photo open in a window beside your Procreate canvas while you work.

To do so, tap and hold the bar at the bottom centre of the screen in Procreate, then slowly pull up the iPad menu (if you swipe too quickly you’ll close Procreate).

Once the menu is up, tap and hold the photos icon, and drag it to the left side of the screen (or right side, for the lefties out there!) Pull it past the edge of the Procreate window and drop it there and tada, you have both open at the same time. You can also adjust the size of the photo window by holding and sliding the side bar of the window.

Pear Drawing Tips: iPad Pro makes setting up a convenient split screen for working easy.
Pear Drawing Tips: iPad Pro makes setting up a convenient split screen for working easy.

How to Draw Pears Step Two: Blocking Your Shapes

Now you are set up to start drawing pears!

The first step will be blocking out the shapes of the pieces of pear with a solid colour. For this outline I used the studio pen brush under “inking” in the brush menu, because it gives a nice clean line.

To determine which colour to use, I took a look at my pear reference photo and tried to match it generally to the “average” colour tone of each of the pieces. Your outline does not need to be perfect by any means (part of the beauty of drawing a fruit is that it is naturally imperfect!)

Once you have a fully enclosed shape, you can fill it in with solid colour by tapping and holding the colour icon in the top right, and then dragging it to the inside of your shape and releasing. The shape will then fill with that colour. Make sure your shape is fully enclosed or the “fill” will fill the entire canvas. If this happens just tap your canvas with 2 fingers to “undo.”

How to Draw a Pear: Blocking out your colours first is helpful for digital painting.
How to Draw a Pear: Blocking out your colours first is helpful for digital painting.

You may find it helpful to separate these shapes onto separate layers. I kept my “whole” pear on a different layer than the two cut pieces, just to make sure the separate elements didn’t bleed into one another when editing.

To create a new layer tap the “layers” icon in the top right menu, and then tap the “+” in the drop down. You can tap and hold any layer in the menu and drag it above or below other layers.

You can adjust the size and position of different elements in your blocked shapes by utilizing the “lasso” tool. That is the tool in the top left menu that looks like the letter “S”. Tap it, and then make sure “freehand” is highlighted in the bottom menu. Then you can use your Apple Pencil to draw around the part you want to adjust.

How to Draw Pears: Use the Lasso Tool to adjust your drawing.
How to Draw Pears: Use the Lasso Tool to adjust your drawing.

One you’ve traced around that portion, tap the cursor tool in the top left menu and you’ll see a bounding box appear which you can use to make adjustments. For example, I adjusted the top portion of my half pear that was slightly too tall and dragged it down using this method.

How to Draw Pears: Procreate makes editing your drawing easy.
How to Draw Pears: Procreate makes editing your drawing easy.

How to Draw Pears Step Three: Underlying Gradients

Now that you have your base layers of colour you can start “painting” and adding layers of colour to build up the texture and details of your pears. Take a good look at your reference photo and try to see the underlying gradients of light and dark tones beneath all of the finer details.

For this part you do not necessarily need to be very tidy with your painting. You can roughly paint out lighter and darker areas and then blend and smooth them out using the smudge tool.

For this part I chose the “gouache” brush under “painting” in the brush menu, just because I like the way it blends after the fact. Feel free to use whichever brush suits you though as you will be blending a lot of it out anyway.

How to Draw Pears: To activate the alpha lock, swipe a layer to the right with two fingers.
How to Draw Pears: To activate the alpha lock, swipe a layer to the right with two fingers.

Procreate has a feature that makes this painting and blending part a lot easier, called the alpha lock. If you “alpha lock” a layer, you can only paint on what already exists on that layer. Meaning when blending out some colours you don’t need to worry about your smudges coming past the edges of you blocked out shape.

To alpha lock a layer, open the layers menu. Using two fingers, swipe the layer you want to lock to the right. If you’ve done it successfully the layer thumbnail will get a checkered background. To un-lock the layer at any point simply swipe it with two fingers to the right again.

Play around until you have a gradient of colour that primarily creates a three-dimension look when zoomed out. Remember all of the crisp and fine details will be added on top once you are finished this part.

How to Draw a Pear: An underlying gradient will give your objects a 3D look.
How to Draw a Pear: An underlying gradient will give your objects a 3D look.

I started with the whole pear, and then moved on to the sliver of skin showing on the pear half. The instructions for painting this one are the same as above, however to start you can utilize the lasso tool in a different and helpful way.

Since there is a crisp boundary between the skin and the flesh, you can isolate the skin portion of that layer to draw on exclusively. It is similar to the alpha lock method, however it is only for a portion of a layer that you can control.

How to Draw Pears: The lasso tool can also be used for isolating areas for drawing.
How to Draw Pears: The lasso tool can also be used for isolating areas for drawing.

To do this, tap the lasso tool and then draw around the skin portion of the shape. Then tap the “brush” tool, and voila, you have your isolated portion of that layer to draw upon.

How to Draw Pears: Isolating areas with the lasso tool will maintain clean edges.
How to Draw Pears: Isolating areas with the lasso tool will maintain clean edges.

How to Draw Pears Step Four: Finer Details

Once you have the underlying tone gradients complete you can start adding in the finer details. I recommend doing these on a new layer so you can edit them without messing up the gradients you’ve already created underneath. This is where is is helpful to zoom in and take a good look at the variations in spotting and patches of roughness along the pear skin.

Feel free to experiment with different brush tips for different effects. For example, to create some of the spotty patches, I selected the “wet acrylic” brush, and played with the brush size to gently add some of the rougher texture to the skin.

How to Draw Pears: Utilize layers to build up details in your digital drawing.
How to Draw Pears: Utilize layers to build up details in your digital drawing.

Another brush that is great for adding a spotty texture is the “Noise” brush under “Materials” in the brush menu. Increase the brush size to the maximum and the particles create a fine spottiness.

During this step it’s a good idea to work generally from darkest details to light. Meaning you finish off with the shiny highlights. To create a realistic shine zoom in and really look at the reflective area.

There are often colours in there you may not expect. In my pear reference the highlights often had a blue and sometimes purple tinge to them. Build up the highlights saving pure white for only the brightest bits and spots.

How to Draw Pears: Look closely at the colours present in your highlights.
How to Draw Pears: Look closely at the colours present in your highlights.

Remember if ever you want to undo a certain stroke, just tap the screen once with two fingers. You can go back as many strokes as you like this way, Procreate remembers everything!

Finally, add your stems and the black bit at the bottom of the fruit. Since the stems have a nice crisp edge I drew them on another new layer with the “technical pen” brush.

How to Draw Pears Step Five: Fruit Flesh

Next is the pale fruit interior. It may look plain at a glance, but to get a realistic effect you’ll need to paint with very subtley different tones of white, grey and green.

Start this portion off by blocking out the interior fruit shapes on a separate layer, much like you did in step 2. Then alpha lock the layer and get to painting! For these portions I used mostly the “Gouache” brush under “Painting” in the brush menu. For any sharper details I switched to the technical pen brush.

How to Draw Pears: Try different brushes to get a realistic texture.
How to Draw Pears: Try different brushes to get a realistic texture.

To finish these portions off I took a brown colour and drew a very thin line around the edge to show the pear skin. Having the layer on alpha lock really helped in creating a thin line that didn’t go beyond the original shape. Finally, add the dark seed and base details and small spots of highlights in pure white.

How to Draw Pears Step Six: Shadows

Finally, to complete the drawing I added some shadows to ground the pears.

For these, once again start on a new layer positioned below the pear layers. Draw out your shadow shapes with a clean-edged brush (like the technical pen) and fill them in with a dark, nearly black colour. Then you can use the layer’s opacity to make them slightly transparent to let the background colour come through.

To do so, open the layers menu, then tap the “N” on the shadow layer. Then you can adjust the slider to the transparency of your liking.

How to Draw Pears: Adjusting opacity is a useful tool when drawing digitally.
How to Draw Pears: Adjusting opacity is a useful tool when drawing digitally.

The last detail is choosing a background colour. You can do so by opening the layers menu and tapping the “background colour” layer. I chose a pale blue that is leaning toward grey because I thought it complimented the rusty colour and white of the pears just marvelously. But this part is up to you, so choose whatever colour you like!

Helpful tips:

  • To return to a colour you’ve already used, tap with one finger on the area with the colour you want to reselect, and hold. A magnifying circle will pop up and you can move that to the exact colour spot you want. Lift your finger and it will select that colour for your brush.
  • You can zoom in and out by “pinching” the screen with two fingers. Don’t forget you can zoom in for areas with small details. You can also rotate the canvas using the two-finger pinch (rather than turning the iPad itself around, an inevitable habit when you’re used to turning your piece of paper around – there is an easier way!

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You’ve Completed our Realistic Pear Drawing Tutorial!

You’ve now mastered how to draw pears!

If you’re someone who draws or paints a lot, you know it’s possible to keep going and going and tweaking and tweaking into eternity. And truthfully Procreate makes falling into this even easier.

The up side, however, is that you can leave the piece alone for a time, and then very easily pick up where you left off, without having to get all of your paint and supplies out.

All that said, you will know when it’s done, and for a satisfying finish to your digital drawing experience, you can utilize one of my favourite Procreate features – timelapse video.

By default, Procreate records your entire drawing process (you can opt to turn this off, but really why?) You can play it all back in high speed when your drawing is complete. It’s a fun thing to watch and a fantastic thing to share with curious fans of your art.

If you’re a freelance illustrator, find that offering a timelapse video of your clients’ work acts as a competitive advantage. And better yet, offering a video that showcases the creation of your pear drawing requires no additional time or money.

By using this Procreate tutorial as your step-by-step drawing guide for how to draw pears, I’m sure you will be very satisfied with your result. Once you’ve gone through the motions from start to finish you can experiment and settle into your own process.

This medium has so many possibilities that you can really let your creativity run wild. So dive in, go digital and have fun!

Now you're an expert on how to make the best realistic pear drawing!
Now you’re an expert on how to make the best realistic pear drawing!

Best Illustration Apps

This story offers a step-by-step Procreate tutorial on how to draw pears. It’s important to note that there are several other drawing apps you can use on iPad Pro when drawing pears. Here are just a few:

  • Notes: The Apple sketch app that comes with your iPad! Simple, easy to use for quick sketches, free and fast. Though for serious drawing you may want to seek apps with more robust options/tools. Price: FREE
  • Adobe Illustrator Draw: This app is for creating vector graphics, with a very intuitive interface. It can also sync with Adobe’s Creative Cloud, meaning you can transfer your work between the iPad and desktop no problem. Price: FREE with Creative Cloud subscription, monthly plan prices vary.
  • Inspire: Fast and nicely responsive, with a huge variety of customizable tools, and over 80 brushes. Great for beginners and intermediates alike. Price:$13.99 CAD, $27.99 for Pro Version.
  • Procreate: Easily one of the most popular drawing apps, it works seamlessly with Apple Pencil, is highly responsive and offers an excellent variety of tools, all presented in a terrifically simple interface. Price: $13.99 CAD

If you’re a newbie digital illustrator we also suggest purchasing Beginners Guide to Digital Painting in Procreate, iPad and iPad Pro for Dummies, a protective iPad cover and Apple Pencil Case.

Procreate Tutorial: The Benefits of iPad Pro

  • The process is very similar to drawing using traditional methods on paper. You’ll be delighted by how intuitive it is, and how for the actual drawing part, you don’t need to re-learn anything.
  • Streamlined process. All of your supplies – camera, reference photos, paper, pens, pencils, eraser, pencil sharpener, paint and paint brushes, are all combined into one place – iPad Pro and the Apple Pencil.
  • The ability to undo when your pen stroke wasn’t quite right. You can also edit certain elements after the fact. The thickness of that piece is too much, I don’t quite like the colour I used here. All of that can be fixed!
  • The ability to work in layers, drawing or colouring over or under certain elements without worrying about accidental erasing or colour contamination.
  • You aren’t tethered to your desk, you can get comfy and work wherever you like. And that includes outside your own home too.
  • Easy transferability/sharability of your art. Your finished product is already in a format that you can add to your illustration portfolio online, share on your social media, etc. No need to arrange a high quality scan or professional photograph.
  • The ability to replicate elements, (for patterning, for example) rather than needing to hand-draw the same thing over and over.

If you’re a freelance illustrator looking to up your game, getting familiar with this medium will benefit you tremendously. And if you are an amateur who just loves to draw, looking to have fun creating pears or other still life drawings, iPad Pro and Apple Pencil can help you do things you might not have thought possible.

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