
First Day of Spring: Finding Renewal Through Color and Creativity
For thirty-five years I wandered through the creative world. Scrapbooking. Interior design. Floral design. Graphic design. Acrylics. Each chapter felt like a detour - like I was circling something I couldn't quite name, always one turn away from where I was supposed to be. Every new direction felt like proof that I'd gotten it wrong again.
Until it wasn't. Until I found watercolor, and something quietly clicked into place.
What I know now - and what I couldn't have understood while I was living it - is that I wasn't lost for thirty-five years. I was in the chrysalis. All of those turns, all of that searching, all of that time I thought I was wasting? It was transformation, happening slowly and invisibly, the way it always does.
Maybe you're in the chrysalis right now. Maybe you've been wandering too, wondering when things will finally make sense. Spring has a way of reminding us that stillness isn't the same as stagnation, and that what looks like waiting is sometimes becoming.
Table of Contents: First Day of Spring: Finding Renewal Through Color and Creativity
What the First Day of Spring Really Feels Like
Why Spring Invites a Creative Reset
A Spring Color Palette to Explore
Simple Ways to Bring Spring Into Your Creative Practice
Try a Butterfly or Flower Doodle
What the First Day of Spring Really Feels Like
Spring doesn't always announce itself. After a long winter, the change can feel almost imperceptible at first. A different quality of morning light. The sound of birds returning. A restlessness you can't quite name.
For those of us "creatives" who pay attention to the natural world - who notice color and light and texture - this moment matters. It's a signal. Something is possible again.
That feeling of possibility is worth paying attention to, especially if you've been in a season of waiting or stillness. There's a reason so many traditions mark this turning point. It's not just weather. It's a reminder that things change, that what has been still can begin to move again.
Why Spring Invites a Creative Reset
There's something about seasonal change that opens us up. Winter tends to narrow our focus. We move inward, conserve energy, and stay close to the familiar. Spring gently reverses that. It invites us to look outward again - to notice what's new, to try something we've been putting off.
This doesn't mean you need to overhaul your creative practice or set ambitious goals. A creative reset in spring can be as simple as reaching for a brighter color than usual, or spending fifteen minutes with a sketchbook and no particular plan.
The invitation is to begin. Not to finish, not to produce - just to begin.
A Spring Color Palette to Explore
One of the easiest ways to welcome the season is through color. Spring has its own palette - soft and fresh, with just enough contrast to feel alive.
Think of the colors that appear first: the pale green of new leaves, the blush of early blossoms, the clear blue of a sky that's been gray for months. These aren't loud colors. They're gentle ones. And they work beautifully together in watercolor.
Soft sage or celadon green: the color of new growth before it deepens
Blush pink or peach: light enough to feel like morning
Pale lavender: quiet and a little unexpected
Warm ivory or cream: a natural base that keeps everything feeling soft
Clear sky blue: fresh and open
You don't need all of them. Even two or three pulled from this range can create something that feels unmistakably like spring.

Simple Ways to Bring Spring Into Your Creative Practice
Paint What You See
The simplest approach is also the most grounding. Look for spring where you are - a branch with buds, a pot of tulips on the windowsill, the pattern of light through a curtain. Paint what's actually in front of you, even loosely, even quickly. Familiarity lowers pressure, and lower pressure means you're more likely to actually start.
Try a Butterfly or Flower Doodle
Simple subject matter has a way of quieting the inner critic. A single flower. A butterfly with rounded wings. These shapes are forgiving, familiar, and surprisingly satisfying to fill with spring color. You don't need to make it realistic. You just need to make it yours.
Let the Paint Lead
Watercolor especially has a way of doing what it wants. On the first day of spring, that can feel like a gift rather than a frustration. Wet the paper, drop in color, and see where it goes. The soft blooms and unexpected blends that result often look more like spring than anything you could have planned.
FAQs About Spring and Creativity
Do I need to be an experienced artist to try these ideas?
Not at all. These suggestions are designed for anyone who wants a low-pressure way to engage creatively with the season. Simple shapes, a limited color palette, and unplanned painting sessions are all approaches that welcome beginners.
What supplies do I need to get started?
A basic watercolor set, a small brush, and watercolor paper are enough. You can also use colored pencils or markers if that's what you have on hand. The medium matters less than the intention to start.
What if I don't feel inspired?
Inspiration often follows action rather than leading it. Starting with something small and familiar - a single flower, a stripe of color - can be enough to shift the mood. You don't need to wait until you feel ready.
How long should a creative session be?
As long or as short as feels right. Even ten or fifteen minutes can be meaningful. The goal isn't output. It's the quiet experience of making something, however small.
What if I don't consider myself a creative person?
Creativity isn't a fixed trait - it's a practice. Anyone can pick up a brush and respond to the season around them. Spring is a gentle reminder of that. Things transform slowly, and so do we.
Final Thoughts
The first day of spring is less about the calendar and more about a feeling - the sense that something has turned, that what was still is now moving again. You don't have to wait for warm weather or blooming flowers to meet that moment. You can meet it right where you are, with whatever you have, whenever you're ready.
Sometimes a small creative choice is enough to mark the season. And marking the season, it turns out, is one of the gentlest ways to feel connected to the world around you.
A Few Small Invitations
Thanks for reading this week.
If you're ready for a little more creativity in your life, you're welcome to download my free Whimsical Bird Trio tutorial - a simple, joyful project to ease you into making more art. When you sign up for the free watercolor tutorial, you'll also receive a free subscription to the Creative Heart Journal; it's published weekly and is delivered straight to your email inbox. Click this link to sign up: https://creativewannabes.com/sign-up
Please join my free Facebook group where you will find:
❤️simple, approachable creative prompts
❤️encouragement without pressure or perfection
❤️a kind, supportive community of women
❤️opportunities to explore creativity in different ways
You can join the Facebook group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/createwithmissusmidlife
Lastly, if you'd like to paint the above flower and butterfly with me, you can watch the full tutorial here:
