Create a four-panel comic strip by designing characters, sketching simple panels, adding dialogue, and coloring to tell a short, clear story.



Step-by-step guide to draw a comic strip
Step 1
Pick one short story idea that can happen in four moments like a joke a surprise or a tiny adventure.
Step 2
Draw a simple main character design on scrap paper using basic shapes to decide their look.
Step 3
Draw one or two supporting characters on scrap paper and give each a unique feature like a hat or big smile.
Step 4
Divide a fresh sheet into four equal panels by drawing the comic frame with your ruler.
Step 5
Sketch the first moment of your story in panel 1 using light pencil lines to show the setting and the main character.
Step 6
Sketch the second moment in panel 2 showing a small action or reaction from your characters.
Step 7
Sketch the third moment in panel 3 to build the story or show a surprise change.
Step 8
Sketch the fourth moment in panel 4 to show the ending or punchline clearly.
Step 9
Draw empty speech bubbles in each panel where characters will talk.
Step 10
Write short clear dialogue inside each speech bubble that matches what the pictures show.
Step 11
Trace over your final pencil lines with a black pen or marker to make the art bold.
Step 12
Color your comic using your coloring materials and add any final small details.
Step 13
Share your finished comic strip on DIY.org
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
What can we use if we don't have a ruler or black marker?
Use the straight edge of a hardcover book or a cereal-box flap to draw the four-panel frame and trace final pencil lines with a dark ballpoint pen, permanent marker, or even a sharpened colored pencil to make the art bold.
My characters look different in each panel or my ink smudges—how can I fix that?
Keep your character consistent by copying the simple shapes from your scrap-paper design into each panel with light pencil lines, erase stray sketch marks after tracing, and wait for the black pen or marker to dry before you color to avoid smudges.
How can I change this activity for younger or older kids?
For younger kids, provide pre-drawn main and supporting characters and large speech bubbles with one-line dialogue, while older kids can add detailed backgrounds, more complex dialogue across the four panels, and finer inking before coloring.
How can we make the comic more special or share it beyond DIY.org?
Personalize the strip by adding sound-effect words, a caption box, or alternate endings in extra panels, then scan or photograph your traced-and-colored final comic and upload the image to DIY.org to share.
Watch videos on how to draw a comic strip
Facts about cartooning and storytelling for kids
✏️ Cartoonists often start characters from simple shapes (circles, squares, triangles) so they're easy to redraw in every panel.
4️⃣ The four-panel format is famous in Japan as 'yonkoma' and is perfect for short jokes or tiny stories.
🐶 Charles M. Schulz's Peanuts ran from 1950 to 2000 and was published in thousands of newspapers worldwide.
📰 Most daily newspaper comic strips were printed in black-and-white, while Sunday strips often appeared in full color.
💬 Speech balloons show spoken dialogue while cloud-like thought bubbles show inner thoughts—artists use different shapes on purpose.


Only $6.99 after trial. No credit card required