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How to Draw Nemo Drawing

Published Jan. 18, 2023, 6:58 a.m.

Nemo Drawing


Figure out how to draw an extraordinary-looking Nemo with simple, bit-by-bit drawing directions and video instructional exercises. Following the straightforward advances, you can undoubtedly draw a wonderful Nemo.

Visit the Sonic Drawing easy on the soft roots website.

Nemo is the star of Disney and Pixar's energized films, Tracking down Nemo (2003) and Tracking down Dory (2016). Nemo is a youthful clownfish from the tropical coral reefs off the bank of Australia.


In the primary film, Nemo sets out on an experience that could only be described as epic when he is caught by a jumper and put in a fish tank.  Clownfish are one of a kind in that they make their home in an animal called an anemone - a word that youthful Nemo saw as especially hard to articulate.

Anemones are fixed animals connecting themselves to the ocean bottom, catching fish to eat using their stinging appendages.

Clownfish partake in a cooperative relationship with the anemone. The fish rub against the anemone, covering themselves in a disgusting substance that keeps them from getting stung. They can then conceal in the anemone from bigger fish that might want to eat the little comedian fish. 

How do the clownfish help the anemone?


It has been hypothesized that their presence ventilates the anemone, cleaning it and aiding it to breathe, or that the clownfish draws in ruthless fish for the anemone to stagger and eat.

Might you want to have the option to draw Nemo?


Doing so is simple, with the assistance of this basic, bit-by-bit instructional exercise. All you will require is a pencil and a piece of paper - and maybe an eraser as well as markers, hued pencils, pastels, or paints.

While Nemo is an orange jokester fish, this kind of fish can come in many tones, including red, yellow, and, surprisingly, purple.

Each move toward this drawing guide contains both a representation and an informative message. In each step, new lines drawn are featured in blue, while lines from past advances have blurred to dark.

A few stages will expect you to delete lines, called rules, that attract past advances.

If you loved this instructional exercise, see the accompanying drawing guides: Dory, Animation Fish, and Dolphin.

Nemo for Youngsters - Stage 1


Start by attracting an egg shape to frame Nemo's head.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 2


Expand long, bent lines from the shape, framing the body.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 3


Proceed with these lines, erupting them outward to frame the tail.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 4


Delete the rules from Nemo's head.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 5


Encase the tail using a scalloped, wavy line. Draw long, bent lines around the head, shaping Nemo's most memorable stripe.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 6


Draw a little oval close to the lower part of the head utilizing a spotted line. From the oval, broaden two marginally bent lines, one longer than the other. Interface the lines utilizing a scalloped, wavy line to shape the pectoral blade.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 7


Eradicate the rules from the balance.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 8


Detail the blade with one more scalloped line lined up with the first. Draw a few bent and "U" formed lines inside the blade.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 9


Define bent boundaries across Nemo's body to shape two additional arrangements of stripes.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 10


Define a scalloped boundary lined up with every one of the lines of the last stripe. Define two scalloped boundaries along the tip of the tail and one close to the line where the tail meets the body. Define bent boundaries of different sizes down the tail length to add detail.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 11


Define a wavy boundary from the highest point of Nemo's head to the foundation of his tail, shaping his dorsal balance.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 12


Detail the balance by defining two arrangements of scalloped boundaries inside each part of the dorsal blade. Then, define bent boundaries across the balance.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 13


Expand a bent, scalloped line from the side of Nemo's face, framing the other dorsal balance. Since this is Nemo's "fortunate blade" - the one that was harmed when he was still in the egg - let the line plunge internally to show the abnormality of shape.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 14


Define a scalloped boundary across the fortunate blade, and detail it with a few somewhat bent lines.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 15


Attract two ovals to shape Nemo's eyes.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 16


Inside the eye, draw a circle inside a circle. Draw a minuscule circle between the two circles, and shade the deepest circle.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 17


Rehash this cycle in the other eye.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 18


Draw a wide "U" molded line to shape Nemo's grinning mouth. Interface it at the top with a somewhat bent line, and embellish each corner with a short, bent line.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 19


Define two bent boundaries inside the mouth, illustrating the teeth. Conceal hidden therein.

Simple Nemo Drawing - Stage 20


Variety Nemo. As a tropical clownfish, he is radiant orange in variety with white and dark stripes.
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