
Rainy Day Watercolor Window - Beginner Watercolor Painting for Spring
There's something about April rain. It arrives without asking. It rearranges your afternoon. It fogs up the windows and turns the whole world a little softer, a little slower. And if you're anything like me, it might just be the thing that finally gives you permission to sit down and create. This week's beginner watercolor painting for spring is a rainy day window - an arched frame, a little clay pot, a vase of soft pink blooms on the sill, and rain falling quietly outside the glass. It's a simple scene. An ordinary moment. And it might be one of my favorites we've ever painted together.
Table of Contents
The Tennis Match I Didn't Get to Play
The Window as a Creative Portal
How This Painting Comes Together
Why This Is the Perfect Beginner Watercolor Painting for Spring
The Tennis Match I Didn't Get to Play
I grew up in Michigan, where spring rain was never optional. It just showed up - sometimes for days at a stretch. As a teenager who played tennis and spent summers at the lake, I was not always a gracious host to it. I remember the specific sinking feeling of checking the sky in the morning and knowing: not today.
I had a big picture window in the house I grew up in, with a sofa pushed right up against it. The kind of spot you'd curl up in with your knees tucked, watching the world outside go gray and quiet. When it rained, I always found my way there. I drew. I painted. I knitted. I disappeared into whatever I was making while the rain tapped steadily at the glass.
I didn't call it creativity then. I called it waiting for the weather to clear.
What the Rain Gave Back
Here's what I couldn't see then.
Every single one of those rained-out afternoons gave me something I didn't know I needed. A cleared schedule. A quiet house. Time to sit at the window and do something with my hands. My hands always knew what to do when the world slowed down enough to let them.
When my family moved to California, my whole relationship with rain changed. Suddenly it was something we wished for. Something rare and welcome. And now, living in Idaho, I get a little of both worlds - enough rain to feel like home, and enough dry days to make a gray morning feel like a gift. Today as I write this, a steady spring rain is falling on the new trees I planted out back. They needed it. I needed it. There is something deeply satisfying about watching the ground receive what it's been waiting for.
What if those cancelled plans were never interruptions?
What if they were always invitations?
The Window as a Creative Portal
I've been thinking about windows lately.
A window is the place where inside and outside meet without touching. You're warm. You're safe. You're watching something happen that doesn't require anything from you. And in that particular kind of watching, something in the creative mind wakes up.
I think many of us have more creative memories attached to rainy windows than we realize. The afternoon you stayed inside and drew for the first time. The gray day you started a quilt, or a letter, or a recipe. The moment you looked out at wet glass and thought: I could draw or paint that.
This week's beginner watercolor painting for spring is your invitation to paint it now.

How This Painting Comes Together
This is one of those paintings that looks more complicated than it is - and I mean that in the best possible way.
We start with the sky behind the glass - a soft, wet-on-wet wash of pale blue-gray that sets the whole quiet mood. Then we build the warm stone arch around the window, keeping it loose and slightly uneven. That natural variation is what makes it feel hand-painted and real, not stiff or overworked.
The window sill comes next - a simple wooden ledge in warm terracotta tones - and then the two little companions that make this scene feel lived-in: a clay pot with a leafy green plant on the left, and a small blue vase with soft pink blooms on the right.
Finally, the rain. Just a few loose, confident brushstrokes of watery blue on the glass. Simple, honest, and surprisingly satisfying.
The full step-by-step video tutorial walks you through every stage at an unhurried pace - no drawing experience needed, tracing pattern included.
▶️ Scroll all the way down to the end of this post for a link to my complete tutorial on YouTube
Why This Is the Perfect Beginner Watercolor Painting for Spring
Spring subjects are the most forgiving - and this rainy window scene is no exception.
Soft edges. Quiet colors. An arched window that actually looks better when it's slightly uneven. The kind of painting that meets you exactly where you are and asks nothing more than your attention for an afternoon.
The arched window frame gives you a simple structure to work within. The terracotta pot and little blue vase are small enough to feel manageable, personal enough to feel meaningful. And the rain on the glass? That's just a few loose brushstrokes of watery blue - one of the most satisfying things you'll ever paint.
This is beginner watercolor painting for spring at its most honest. Not a technique to master. A feeling to follow.
You Don't Have to Wait for the Rain
One of the most freeing things about watercolor - and about creativity in general - is that you get to choose your weather.
You can sit at your table on a bright Tuesday and paint a rainy window. You can feel the quiet that comes with it. You can let the soft blues and warm stones and pink blooms move your brush without the sky cooperating at all.
Creativity doesn't wait for the right conditions. It is the right conditions.
I hear from so many women who say some version of: "I've been waiting until I feel ready." But here's what I've learned after years of painting and teaching - ready is a feeling that comes after you begin, not before. The brush in your hand is the only credential you need.
So whether it's raining outside your window today or blazing with sunshine, this week's painting is for you. Paint the window. Feel the afternoon settle. Let your hands do what they've always known how to do.
The rain is already inside you. All you have to do is begin.
April Rain Color Palette
This week's palette is built for quiet skies, wet glass, and the warm light of a window you love. Five colors that work beautifully together no matter how you mix them.
Garden Beyond -The soft green trees and shrubs visible through the glass, the potted plant and leaves. Mix in some Raindrop blue to darken it.
Hearthstone -A warm sandy beige for the sill beneath the window. Let it be slightly uneven - that's what gives it life.
Raindrop -A deeper dusty blue for falling rain, window shadows, and the glass itself. Dilute with plenty of clean water to paint the rainy sky behind the glass.
Terracotta Sill -Warm orange-brown for the clay pot. This is your grounding color.
Bloom in the Rain -Soft dusty pink for the little flowers in the vase. Your heart color. A little goes a long way.
Mixing tip: Blend Raindrop with plenty of water - make it very dilute and light for the glass - you want it to feel wet and cool, not flat. And don't try to make the sill or outline of the window perfect. That's what gives it life and whimsy.
FAQs
Do I need expensive supplies for this beginner watercolor painting for spring? Not at all. A basic student-grade watercolor palette, two or three round brushes, watercolor paper, and a fine tip black pen are everything you need. Start with what you have - that's always enough.
What if my window doesn't look like yours? Good - it shouldn't! It should look like yours. The stone arch especially is meant to have natural variation and personality. Let the watercolor do what watercolor does best and surprise you.
Can a complete beginner paint this scene? Absolutely. This is one of the most beginner-friendly watercolor paintings we've done together. The wet-on-wet sky technique is forgiving, the simple shapes are easy to trace, and the whole painting comes together more quickly than you'd expect.
Do you have a traceable pattern for this painting? Yes! You'll find the traceable link in the YouTube tutorial description so you can print and trace the basic shapes before you begin. No drawing required.
Where can I share my finished painting? I would love to see it! Come share in my free Facebook community - one of the most encouraging groups of creative women you'll ever find: 👉 https://www.facebook.com/groups/createwithmissusmidlife
A Little Heart Invitation
This spring, I hope you give yourself at least one quiet afternoon to paint just for the pleasure of it. Not to improve, not to produce, not to post. Just to feel the brush move and watch the colors bloom.
Because here's what I know to be true: you are someone who makes things. Maybe you've forgotten that. Maybe someone along the way convinced you it wasn't for you. But that creative part of you is still there. She never left. She's just been waiting for a rainy afternoon and a window to look out of.
This beginner watercolor painting for spring is that window.
Sit down. Pick up your brush. Let the rain do what it does best.
▶️ Watch the Full Tutorial on YouTube:
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