
How to Paint a Father's Day Baseball and Glove - A Beginner Watercolor Tutorial
I grew up with two sisters and no brothers. My dad never had a son to share sports with - but I figured out early that if I sat down and watched baseball with him, I got something most kids wanted. His full attention. This Father's Day watercolor tutorial is painted in his honor - and for every quiet, steady person you've loved who showed you something without ever quite meaning to.
How to Paint a Father's Day Baseball and Glove - A Beginner Watercolor Tutorial
A Father's Day Watercolor Painting Worth Keeping
Your Father's Day Watercolor Color Palette
How to Paint the Father's Day Baseball and Glove - 6 Easy Steps
The Side Door Into Someone's Heart
This Tutorial Is for You - Wherever You Are This Father's Day
What Baseball Taught Me
I didn't love baseball at first. I loved my dad. And baseball was the door that let me in.
He explained everything - the rules, the strategy, why a player did what he did at exactly that moment. I didn't always follow it. But I followed him.
Near the end of his life, I stayed with him while my sister traveled. We watched the Detroit Tigers - his team since growing up in Michigan - play one of the greatest games I've ever seen. He was too sick to explain much that day. So I picked up a pencil instead and doodled to pass the time. The lamp. The table. The computer on the desk.
I think that's what baseball really taught me. Not the rules of the game - but how to sit quietly beside someone you love, present and unhurried, even when there isn't much to say.
That's still true every time I pick up a brush.
A Father's Day Watercolor Painting Worth Keeping
This week's Father's Day watercolor tutorial is painted in my new folk art style - a baseball nestled in a warm golden glove, a Happy Father's Day pennant, cheerful folk art flowers on both sides, and a sunshine above it all on a grassy hill.
It's beginner friendly, no drawing required, and the kind of painting you finish and want to give to someone. Or keep for yourself as a quiet tribute to someone you've loved.
And here's what I love most about this painting - you can write anything you like on that pennant. Happy Father's Day. Best Dad Ever. Play Ball. Or simply the name of someone who mattered. Make it completely yours.

Your Father's Day Watercolor Color Palette
This is the first Creative Heart Journal issue painted with my new signature Daniel Smith watercolor palette - and I'm so excited to share these colors with you.
Five colors is all you need for this Father's Day watercolor tutorial:
Leather Brown (Transparent Red Oxide - Daniel Smith) - the warm golden brown of the baseball glove. Rich, earthy and completely satisfying to paint.
Violet Bloom (Carbazole Violet - Daniel Smith) - the deep purple folk art flowers. Bold and beautiful against all that warm golden brown.
Outfield Green (Sap Green - Daniel Smith) - the grassy hill, flower stems and leaves. Fresh and summery and exactly right for a June painting.
Sunshine Yellow (Hansa Yellow Light - Daniel Smith) - the warm sun and yellow folk art flowers. Your cheeriest color this week.
Poppy Red (Quinacridone Red - Daniel Smith) - the baseball stitching and red flowers. Dilute it way down with water for the soft pink pennant flag.
Mixing tip: For the pennant, take Poppy Red and dilute it way, way down with water until it's barely there - that's your soft pink flag. And if your purple flowers feel a little flat, mix in the tiniest touch of Poppy Red while it's still wet to warm them up.
How to Paint the Father's Day Baseball and Glove - 6 Easy Steps
The full video tutorial is on my video channel at Mind Your Heart Studio. Here's the simple breakdown:
Step 1: Lightly sketch or trace the outline of the baseball, mitt, sun, flowers and flag. Tracing is completely fine - it removes drawing anxiety and gets you straight to the painting.
Step 2: Paint the sun, two flowers, the flag and mitt with Sunshine Yellow, diluted Poppy Red and Leather Brown. Keep everything light at this stage.
Step 3: Paint two flowers with Violet Bloom. This is where the folk art magic starts to happen.
Step 4: Paint the leaves, stems and grassy hill with Outfield Green. Keep your brushstrokes loose and flowing.
Step 5: Paint the grass sprigs deep green and add the baseball stitching in Poppy Red. This is the most satisfying detail of the whole painting.
Step 6: Outline and add details with a permanent black fine tip pen. This is what gives the painting that crisp folk art feeling and makes everything look intentional and finished.
The Side Door Into Someone's Heart
Not every love story looks the way we expect it to.
Sometimes it's two sisters and no brothers, and a daughter who figures out that baseball is the way in. Sometimes it's a quiet room, a dim lamp, and a sketchbook instead of conversation. Sometimes love doesn't say much at all - it just sits there, beside you, present.
I think we spend a lot of time waiting for the big moments. The long talks and the perfect words. But so much of what actually matters happens in the small ones. A game on TV. A doodle in the margins. An hour that doesn't ask anything of you except to stay.
If you're painting this for your dad, your husband, your son, or anyone who taught you something without ever quite meaning to - I hope it feels like something. A quiet thank you, even all these years later.
And if the side door into someone's heart is still open right now - a shared hobby, a quiet drive, an hour of simply sitting together - I hope you take it.
That's where the real conversations happen. Even the silent ones.
This Tutorial Is for You - Wherever You Are This Father's Day
Whether you're an experienced painter or picking up a brush for the very first time, this Father's Day watercolor tutorial is designed to meet you exactly where you are. No pressure. No comparison. Just a meaningful painting, a warm summer palette, and a quiet hour that belongs entirely to you.
FAQs About This Father's Day Watercolor Tutorial
Do I need any art experience for this Father's Day watercolor tutorial?
Not at all. This tutorial is designed for complete beginners. A tracing guide is available so you never have to worry about drawing the baseball glove from scratch.
What supplies do I need?
A basic watercolor set, two or three brushes in different sizes, watercolor paper, a jar of water, and a black fine tip pen for the finishing details. I paint with Daniel Smith professional watercolors but any watercolor paints in similar colors will work beautifully.
Can I personalize the pennant?
Absolutely - and I highly encourage it! Write your dad's name, your family's team, or any message that feels right. That pennant belongs to you.
How long will it take?
Most beginners complete this painting in thirty to forty-five minutes. It's a perfect quiet Father's Day morning project.
Where can I find the full video tutorial?
The full step by step video is on my video channel at Mind Your Heart Studio (also see the link above). You can also get the complete Creative Heart Journal - including the color palette, tutorial steps, and Heart Practice of the Week - delivered free to your inbox every Friday (see link below).
A Small Invitation
If you've been quietly curious about watercolor and just needed a reason to begin - or a person worth painting for - this is it. The Creative Heart Journal is free and arrives in your inbox every Friday. When you sign up you'll also receive my Whimsical Bird Trio Starter Pack as a welcome gift - everything you need to paint your very first watercolor card in about thirty minutes.
👉 Sign up here: creativewannabes.com/sign-up
And if you'd like to paint live with a warm welcoming group of women - no judgment, no comparison, just color and kindness - come join us at our free monthly painting class:
👉 https://kitchentablecreativity.com/free-workshop
With heart and color, 💛
Donna
