Thursday, April 23, 2026

Rainbow Mandala LIVE at Ranger


Today I was honored to be invited to Ranger HQ in Tinton Falls, NJ to draw mandalas with Ranger's Social Media/ Education Specialist Patti Behan during a Ranger LIVE Video. We had lots of fun (Thank you Patti and Asia!) and if you'd like to watch the whole thing it is archived HERE as part of the Ranger YouTube Channel. Meanwhile, I had written up a basic tutorial in advance so that I would remember all the steps (b/c I was Nervous with a capital N, lol!) and if, like me, you sometimes find still photos helpful in a learning context, I'm posting it here... so Read On! ♥

Materials: 
Of course this method will work with your favorite inks, pens and paper but... I'm linking up the Ranger items I used in the samples and during the "Live". (They genuinely are my GO-TO items which I love and use every single day.)

Ranger Archival Inks in Sweet Treat, Bright Tangelo, Sun Dazed, Avocado Toast and Aquamarine (OR your own five favorite blend-friendly shades)

Mini Ink Blending Tool and five Domed Foams (During the vid we mentioned a storage tin project... you can find that HERE!)

Letter It Fineliners, Black 3-pack (assorted tips: 01, 04, and 09)

4.25 x 6" panel of Stark White Cardstock 

Large, medium and small circle stencils, templates or dies; sample uses one of Dina's Coaster Stencils, a roll of washi tape and Letter It's Polka Dotting Stencil

Pencil for tracing; ruler if you want to measure points (the sample was made by eye)

Optional Extras: Liquid Pearls, Posca Pens 

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Quick reminder of the Color Spectrum: 
ROYGBIV is a handy acronym you may remember from Junior High; it stands for Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo and Violet. If you blend colors that are next to each other (aka "analogous" colors; they are also consecutive on a color wheel) you'll never make mud. Alternatively, Dyan Reaveley's advice about choosing either a warm or cool color palette is handy. If you do wind up with unexpected brown, ink the edges with Dark Roast Archival and call it rustic!!! :)

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A word about creating smooth, perfect lines: 
This is called line control. Please be advised that MOST people do not naturally start out with perfect line control, BUT it really does develop as you work and practice. Some people find they have better control when pulling the pen towards them or when pushing it away, and it's worth experimenting to see if that helps you. To get best results, you will probably want to rotate the paper as you work. Dotted lines, dots, faux stitching, etc, are all strategies that help disguise this factor. But also: part of the point of drawing mandalas is to help develop line control. 



Procedure:

Step 1: On one corner of a 4.25 x 6" panel of Stark White Cardstock, lightly trace a small circle, and a larger one further into the page, so that the centers of the circles are in the same place, and more or less at the corner of the paper. Start adding concentric rings of color with the Mini Ink Blending Tool and a Domed Foam for each color. (If you try to follow the contour of the two penciled circles across the panel, this will help to keep your design on track without having to measure each set of petals!)

Step 2: The sample is in spectrum order: Sweet Treat, Bright Tangelo, Sun Dazed, Avocado Toast and Aquamarine; then we reverse the order (Avocado, Sun Dazed, Tangelo, Sweet) and keep adding color until the page is filled. Try to make some rings thicker and some thinner; remember that Archival Inks are translucent so you can get interesting effects by letting them overlap a bit.

Step 3: Start adding the basic shapes with a medium (.4) Fineliner. Outline the corner circle, use a small circle template to make round scallops, use the bands of Archival color to make your petals and rings about the same size. YES, if you prefer, you can draw every line in pencil and ink over them later. Some people (ok, ME, lol) find that process more tedious than just drawing with the pen and correcting, disguising or living with any mistakes; it's a personal choice. The more mandalas or zendoodles you draw, the more you will develop your own way to work.

Step 4: Continue adding the basic shapes, without much detail, until the panel is filled. Don't get too bogged down with any mistakes or imperfections, they can be addressed in the next step. A big part of the reason for starting with a single size of pen and NOT adding detail in this step is that, if we have any little inconsistencies to "cover up" that will help us decide where the details will go! Somewhat counter-intuitively, it's usually best to start each new ring in the CENTER of the last one and then work to the right and left; if possible, we want the "meat" of the design to literally take center stage.

Step 5: In this step, plan to be swapping between the thinner (.1) and thicker (.9) Fineliners. Start out by looking for mistakes. "Wonky" lines can be covered up with a thicker pen, or doubled to look intentionally funky. If your petals are very different sizes, you can add additional lines to pad out the small ones. Or you can opt to be really radical and add scribbles, splotches and other intentional "messy" details to create a vibe in which there are no mistakes... just exuberant mark making!

Step 6: Add white... and/or additional colors... with paint pens, liquid pearls, or markers. At this point you could also add stamps, stickers, rub-on transfers, a bit of stenciled pattern, or collage elements. It's your mandala, it can be anything you want! 


What can you do with a completed mandala? Add it to your art journal, frame it, or make it into a card. You may not be 100% in love with your first mandala, but PLEASE don't throw it away... some day you will look back and see how far you've come, you'll be happy to have saved those early ones!

Want to see more of my Mandala Monday posts? Click this link to scroll backwards through that category here on the bog; OR... drop by my Instagram account @llaurenb every Monday! Meanwhile, if you'd like to see the entire video of Patti Behan and myself drawing mandalas in real time, head over to the Ranger YouTube Channel and watch THIS VID.

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