Singing In Shower
68 drawings by Artbitrator players — showing top 24
Learning how to draw a singing in shower scene is all about capturing that silly, joyful moment we've all lived. You're drawing a person mid-belt with their mouth open wide, water streaming down, probably holding an imaginary mic made of shampoo. It's one of those drawings that makes people smile because everyone's done it.
We've got 61 real singing in shower drawings from Artbitrator players, and you can watch how each one was made, stroke by stroke. Some went for stick figures under a showerhead, others drew proper bathroom scenes with tiles and steam. Have a go yourself in Artbitrator—the AI judge will try to guess your drawing as you work, which is oddly entertaining when you're sketching someone belting out tunes in the bath.
Drawings
68
Avg Strokes
1857 strokes
Avg Time
137s
Fastest
31s
How to Draw Singing In Shower
Simple steps to draw singing in shower, based on what works in the examples above.
- 1 Start with a simple head—a circle or oval works fine. Draw the face with eyes closed (or squinting in joy) and the mouth open wide in an 'O' shape, like they're hitting a high note. This expression is key for a singing in shower drawing.
- 2 Sketch a basic body below the head using simple shapes. If you're drawing from the front, a rounded rectangle for the torso and stick arms works. One hand might be holding a pretend microphone near the mouth, the other could be raised dramatically.
- 3 Add the showerhead above the person's head. Draw it as a simple curved pipe coming from the top corner, ending in a circle or half-circle. You can add small oval holes on the showerhead where the water comes out.
- 4 Draw the water as curved lines streaming down from the showerhead, falling past the person. Add a few teardrop shapes scattered around to show splashing droplets. If you want, sketch simple tiles on the wall behind them using a grid of squares or rectangles.
- 5 Include little details that sell it—maybe musical notes floating around their head, steam rising as wavy lines, or bottles on a shelf in the corner. When you draw a singing in shower scene in Artbitrator, you'll see the AI guess in real time, which helps you know if your details are working.
Tip: An open mouth with the top teeth showing and the jaw dropped reads as singing way better than a closed smile—it's all about that wide 'O' shape.
Practice Drawing Singing In ShowerDrawing Tips
- Hair should look wet and heavy, clinging to the head with jagged or droopy lines instead of fluffy volume.
- Water lines don't need to be perfectly straight—let them curve and bend slightly as they fall to make it feel more natural.
- Closed eyes or upward-looking eyes instantly make the person look like they're lost in the music, which adds character to your singing in shower drawing.
Singing In Shower Drawing FAQ
How do you draw a singing in shower scene?
Start with a happy face and wide-open mouth, add a simple body, then draw a showerhead above with water streaming down in curved lines. Toss in a few details like musical notes or wet hair, and you've nailed it. The key bits are the open singing mouth and the water coming from above.
What's the hardest part of a simple singing in shower drawing?
Getting the mouth to actually look like it's singing, not just yawning or shouting. You want that joyful, wide-open expression with the corners of the mouth slightly up. Also, making the water look like it's falling instead of just floating takes a bit of practice with your line angles.
Where's the best place to practice drawing singing in shower scenes?
Artbitrator is brilliant for this because the AI judge guesses your drawing in real time, so you know right away if your singing person looks more like someone screaming or gargling. Plus, all the finished singing in shower drawings get saved so you can replay them and see exactly how other people tackled the hair, water, and facial expression.
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