9 Easy Watercolor Landscape Ideas to Practice at Home
Nine Landscape Studies That Build Real Skills in 20 Minutes Each
Introduction
Landscapes are one of the most forgiving subjects in watercolor. A mountain that is not perfectly shaped still reads as a mountain. A sky gradient that is slightly uneven still reads as sky.
The organic, irregular quality of natural subjects absorbs small imprecisions in a way that geometric or figurative subjects do not, which makes landscape studies ideal for building technique without the pressure of getting every mark exactly right.
The nine ideas below are not ambitious finished paintings. They are focused studies, each designed to be completed in fifteen to twenty minutes and each targeting a specific technique or concept.
Working through them in sequence builds a practical foundation in atmospheric perspective, water control, layering, wet-on-wet, and composition, all within subjects simple enough to start immediately without preliminary drawing skills.
For the principles that make these studies effective, this How to Create Depth in Watercolor Landscapes guide covers atmospheric perspective and the three-plane rule in detail. And for the sky techniques that appear in several of the studies below, this How to Paint Watercolor Skies guide covers all five sky types with step-by-step instructions.
1. Blue Mountains: Atmospheric Perspective in Three Layers
This is the classic study for understanding how distance changes the appearance of color and value in a landscape. The subject is simple: three overlapping mountain shapes, each progressively closer to the viewer, each progressively darker and more saturated.
Begin with the most distant mountain range. Mix a very diluted, cool blue and apply it as a soft wash, keeping the edges soft by working wet-on-wet. This range should be so pale it barely distinguishes itself from the sky above it.
For the middle range, use a slightly more concentrated version of the same blue, or shift it slightly warmer. The edges can be a little more defined. For the closest range, use the most concentrated, darkest version of the blue, applied wet-on-dry for clearly defined edges.
The exercise teaches the four depth cues in a single subject: temperature shifts from cool background to slightly warmer foreground, saturation increases from back to front, contrast increases from back to front, and edge quality shifts from soft to defined. All four working together in a simple three-shape composition make the depth illusion immediate and clear.
A practical variation: add a touch of violet or grey to the most distant mountain mixture to push it further back. The blue-violet combination in the background intensifies the sense of atmospheric haze.
2. Soft Clouds in a Blue Sky: Lifting Practice
This study is entirely about timing. The technique, lifting pigment from a wet wash to reveal the paper beneath, is simple to understand and genuinely difficult to execute well until you have practiced it enough to recognize the correct moment.
Apply a graded blue wash across the paper using the wet-on-wet technique, concentrating the blue at the top and diluting it toward the horizon. While the wash is still wet but has lost its initial shine, take a clean brush that has been rinsed and blotted until damp rather than wet, and use it to lift paint from the areas where clouds will appear. The damp brush absorbs the pigment, revealing softer versions of the paper white beneath.
The window for this technique is narrow. Too early, while the wash is very wet, and the pigment flows back into the lifted area as soon as the brush leaves. Too late, once the wash has dried, and the brush damages the paper surface rather than lifting cleanly.
Practicing on scrap paper of the same type before committing to the main sheet is the most reliable way to find the correct timing for your specific paper and paint combination.
An alternative approach for larger, more organic cloud shapes is pressing a crumpled paper towel gently onto the wet surface. The irregular contact pattern of the crumpled towel lifts varying amounts of pigment, producing cloud shapes that look genuinely natural rather than drawn.
For more on cloud painting techniques across all five sky types, this How to Paint Watercolor Skies guide covers the lifting method, the paper towel method, and the timing in full detail.
3. Two Trees in Balance: Light and Shadow Study
Two simple tree shapes side by side seem almost too elementary to be useful as a study, but the exercise conceals real technical content: using temperature shift within a single color to suggest the three-dimensional form of a natural subject.
Mix two versions of green for this study. The first is warmer, leaning toward yellow, for the side of each tree that faces the light source. The second is cooler, leaning toward blue, for the shadowed side and interior of each tree. Apply the warm green first with a wet-on-wet approach to create soft blending between tones, then add the cool green while the first application is still damp.
The composition itself teaches something separate from the color work: two trees of exactly the same height and exactly the same distance apart read as artificial. Varying the height of the two trees and the distance between them makes the composition feel like an observation of something real rather than a diagram.
This study is also useful for practicing the transition from a single flat color to a three-dimensionally modeled surface. A tree painted in a single flat green is a symbol of a tree. A tree painted in warm and cool greens that shift across the form is a tree that exists in a specific light.
4. Open Field with Rolling Hills: Horizontal Transitions
This study practices the most foundational skill in landscape watercolor: creating smooth, continuous horizontal transitions between different color zones without visible hard edges at the boundaries.
The composition is minimal: a band of sky at the top, a band of distant hills in the middle, a band of field in the foreground. The colors move from cool blue at the top through muted green-grey for the hills to warm yellow-ochre for the field. The challenge is in the transitions between zones.
Work wet-on-wet throughout, keeping each zone damp enough that the next zone can blend softly into it at the boundary. The boundary between sky and hills should be the softest, suggesting atmospheric haze. The boundary between hills and field can be slightly more defined but still gradual.
The key discipline in this study is maintaining high water content and high transparency. The temptation to add more pigment for intensity should be resisted. The luminosity of a field in watercolor comes from thin, transparent washes that allow the paper to contribute its whiteness to the overall tone, not from saturated color.
For more on applying wash techniques to create these horizontal transitions, this Watercolor Washes Explained guide covers graded and variegated washes with step-by-step instructions.
5. Lone Tree at Sunset: Glazing and Silhouette
This is a two-stage exercise that teaches one of the most useful techniques in watercolor: painting two completely separate layers that do not interfere with each other when they meet.
Stage one is the sunset background. Mix warm colors in advance: yellow, orange, and pink or rose. Apply them wet-on-wet across the entire sky area, starting with the lightest, warmest color at the horizon and moving toward cooler, slightly more saturated tones at the top. Allow the colors to meet and blend naturally without overworking. Then stop and wait.
The background must be completely dry before stage two begins. This is not a suggestion. Any residual moisture in the background will cause the dark tree color to bloom unpredictably into the sky rather than sitting as a clean silhouette on top of it.
Once the background is thoroughly dry, mix a dark tone for the tree silhouette, a concentrated mix of dark green and burnt sienna or any other rich, dark combination, and apply it wet-on-dry with the precise shapes of the tree trunk, branches, and the suggestion of foliage mass. The dark silhouette against the warm background creates maximum visual contrast with minimum technical complexity.
The exercise also teaches patience. The waiting period between stages is part of the technique, not a break from it.
For more on how layering and glazing work in practice, this How to Layer Watercolor guide covers the full process including practical exercises.
6. Reflections on Water: Mirror Technique
Water reflections appear complex but follow a simple rule: the reflection is an inverted, slightly blurred, and slightly more translucent version of whatever is above the water surface.
Establish a clear horizontal line for the water surface. Paint everything above this line first: sky, distant elements, any trees or structures at the horizon. Allow this to dry completely.
Then paint the reflection below the line by repeating the same colors in inverted vertical positions, but with two differences. First, use a slightly higher water ratio for the reflection, making it more transparent than the original. Second, apply the reflection wet-on-wet so that the edges blend softly into each other rather than being as defined as the original elements above.
The most effective technique for the reflection of trees or vertical elements is to apply the reflection color in wet-on-wet horizontal strokes rather than vertical ones, which suggests the way water disperses reflected images across its surface rather than reproducing them exactly.
After everything is completely dry, a few thin horizontal lines drawn with a fine brush in a slightly lighter or darker tone across the reflection area suggest the surface texture of the water and immediately reinforce the reading of the lower half as water rather than a simple mirror image.
7. Layered Forest: Depth Through Overlapping Tones
This study applies the atmospheric perspective principle from study 1 to a more complex subject: a forest with multiple overlapping layers of trees at different distances.
Begin with a very diluted, cool wash for the most distant part of the forest, suggesting the form of trees without defining individual shapes. Allow this to dry.
Apply a slightly more saturated, slightly warmer layer of trees in front of the first layer, allowing some of the first layer to show through. Continue this sequence, adding progressively darker and warmer layers, until the foreground trees receive the richest, darkest, most defined treatment.
The practical discipline in this study is resisting the temptation to define individual trees in the background. The background should read as a mass of foliage, not as individual trees. This is the rule of thumb from the three-plane approach: if you can count individual elements in a distant zone, the treatment is too detailed.
Adding a small amount of blue to the green mixture for the most foreground trees increases the temperature contrast between foreground and background and strengthens the depth illusion. This is the phantom blue technique from the depth guide applied to a vertical subject rather than a horizontal landscape.
For the full principles behind this kind of layered depth building, this How to Create Depth in Watercolor Landscapes guide covers atmospheric perspective and the three-plane rule in practical terms.
8. Sunlit Field: Transparency and White Paper
This is the most conceptually demanding of the nine studies, not because the technique is complex but because it requires the most restraint. The subject is a field in full sunlight, and the goal is to capture that sense of light through the strategic use of high water content and minimal pigment.
Mix yellow and green with significantly more water than feels necessary. The wash should be so diluted that it looks almost colorless on the palette. Apply it across the field area and the sky area together, allowing the two to blend softly at the horizon.
The paper white that shows through this near-transparent wash is what reads as sunlight. Every additional layer of pigment reduces this effect. The study is complete when the field reads as luminous and open, which typically happens earlier than the instinct to add more color suggests it should.
This study is practice for the discipline of stopping. Watercolor painters who consistently overwork their paintings are usually painters who added more pigment at the point where the painting needed nothing. The sunlit field study makes that decision-making explicit because the subject has no other visual content to serve as distraction.
9. Mountain Lake: The Complete Exercise
This final study combines the techniques from studies 1 and 6 into a single composition: mountains with atmospheric perspective reflected in a lake below. It is the most technically demanding of the nine, but all the skills required have been practiced individually in the preceding studies.
Begin with the sky using a graded blue wash from deep at the top to pale at the horizon. While the sky is still slightly damp, introduce the distant mountain shapes, keeping their edges soft at the boundaries with the sky. Allow everything to dry completely.
Paint the middle-distance mountain or hill shapes with slightly more saturated, slightly warmer color, wet-on-dry for more defined edges. Add any foreground landscape elements with the richest darks and sharpest edges. Allow to dry completely.
Paint the lake area by repeating the sky and mountain colors in inverted, blended versions below the waterline, using wet-on-wet for soft reflections. The water should be treated as a whole rather than element by element.
Once the entire painting is dry, add a few thin horizontal strokes across the lake surface with a fine brush to reinforce the reading of the lower portion as water.
The completed study should demonstrate all four depth cues (temperature, saturation, contrast, edge quality) across the landscape planes, combined with the reflection technique that adds a second dimension of visual interest without additional compositional complexity.
How These Studies Build on Each Other
The nine studies are organized from conceptually simple to technically complex, but they can be approached in any order depending on which technique is most immediately useful.
Studies 1, 3, and 7 focus on the atmospheric perspective principle in different subjects. Studies 2, 4, and 8 focus on water control and restraint in different contexts. Studies 5 and 9 focus on multi-stage processes that require patience between stages. Study 6 focuses on a specific compositional technique that appears frequently in landscape work.
Working through all nine over the course of a week provides systematic coverage of the core technical skills in watercolor landscape painting. Repeating each study with a different color palette, the same mountain scene in warm earth tones, in cool blue-greys, in a single monochromatic green, develops an understanding of how color temperature affects the reading of distance and light without requiring any new technical knowledge beyond what the original study covered.
Conclusion
The value of these studies is not the finished paintings. It is the accumulated experience of making specific technical decisions under controlled conditions and observing the results. Every study that does not go as planned teaches something specific about timing, water level, or color proportion that transfers directly to the next attempt.
Landscapes are the ideal practice subject for this kind of learning because the subject itself is forgiving. A mountain is not wrong if it is slightly irregular. A sky gradient that is not perfectly uniform is still a sky.
The imprecision that would be a problem in a portrait or a technical illustration becomes a quality in a landscape, which means you can focus on the technique rather than on correcting the subject.
For putting these techniques in the context of understanding why they work, this How to Paint Watercolor Skies guide covers the sky techniques used in several of these studies, and this How to Create Depth in Watercolor Landscapes guide covers the atmospheric perspective principles that underpin studies 1, 4, 7, and 9.
For a complete beginner landscape painting walkthrough, this Watercolor Landscape Painting guide covers how simple shapes and basic techniques combine into a finished piece.
Happy painting.










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