How to Draw a Factory: Easy Step-by-Step Guide for Kids

Ready to build your own industrial skyline? This tutorial is perfect for young artists ages 5 and up who want to practice drawing geometric shapes like rectangles and cylinders. Grab your pencil, eraser, and paper to start constructing your very own cartoon factory today.

10 Steps

🎯 Final Result

A colorful, finished cartoon factory drawing with smokestacks and a silo.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1

Step 1: Establishing the Foundation

Sketching the rectangular base and roof of a factory building on a horizon line.

Draw a long horizontal line for the ground. Above it, sketch a rectangle for the main building and a smaller, narrow rectangle on top for the roof. Teacher's Tip: Use a ruler if you want perfectly straight walls, but freehand lines give your drawing a charming, hand-drawn look.

2

Step 2: Adding Roof Texture

Adding zigzag lines to the factory roof to represent corrugated metal roofing.

Draw two parallel zigzag lines on the roof to create a corrugated metal effect. Connect them at the ends and add a slanted line to define the side of the building. Teacher's Tip: Keep your zigzags consistent in size to make the roof look realistic.

3

Step 3: Defining the Structure and Door

Drawing the roof segments and an arched doorway on the side of the factory.

Complete the roof sections using straight lines to form parallelograms. On the side wall, draw an inverted 'U' shape for the main entrance. Teacher's Tip: Ensure your 'U' shape is centered on the wall to keep the building looking balanced.

4

Step 4: Adding Windows

Adding a double door, a large rectangular window, and circular windows to the factory.

Divide the door with a vertical line. Add a large rectangle on the side wall and circular windows near the roof peaks. Teacher's Tip: If drawing perfect circles is tricky, trace around a small coin.

5

Step 5: Window Panes

Drawing grid lines inside the windows to create window panes.

Draw horizontal and vertical lines inside the windows to create a grid or 'crossbar' effect. Teacher's Tip: Press lightly with your pencil so you can easily fix any lines that go outside the window frames.

6

Step 6: Smokestacks

Adding two tall smokestacks to the top of the factory building.

Draw two tall, slanted towers on top of the building. Connect the tops with curved lines. Teacher's Tip: These towers should look sturdy, so make sure the base lines are parallel.

7

Step 7: Storage Silo

Drawing a tall, cylindrical storage silo next to the main factory building.

Draw a tall rectangle next to the main building with a semi-circular top to create a storage silo. Teacher's Tip: This adds depth to your drawing by showing different parts of the factory complex.

8

Step 8: Adding Industrial Details

Adding rivets and connecting pipes to the factory smokestacks and silo.

Add curved lines to the tops of the smokestacks and small dots on the silo to represent rivets. Draw connecting tubes between the structures. Teacher's Tip: Rivets are just tiny circles—don't worry about making them perfect!

9

Step 9: Smoke and Steam

Drawing fluffy clouds of smoke coming out of the factory smokestacks.

Use connected, wavy curved lines to draw clouds of smoke billowing from the tops of the smokestacks. Teacher's Tip: Make the smoke clouds look fluffy and irregular to show movement.

10

Step 10: Bring It to Life with Color

A fully colored cartoon factory drawing with smoke coming from the towers.

Color your factory! Use grays and metallic blues for the building, and perhaps some soft whites or grays for the smoke. Teacher's Tip: Use a darker shade to add a 'shadow' on one side of the building to give it a 3D look.