728 x 90

International Scribble Day (March 27): A Day for Creative “Mess” That Matters!

International Scribble Day (March 27): A Day for Creative “Mess” That Matters!

Some of the best ideas don’t start as neat, perfect lines. They start as a swirl, a squiggle, or a messy little mark on a page!

That’s the spirit behind International Scribble Day, an annual celebration held every year on March 27.

Origins: How International Scribble Day Began

International Scribble Day is a fairly new holiday. It was created by Diane Alber, the author of the children’s book I’m NOT Just a Scribble, and it began around 2019. The message behind the day is simple but powerful: creativity can start small, and everyone deserves kindness and acceptance—no matter their skill level.

In other words: you don’t have to be “an artist” to make something meaningful. You just have to begin. Even if the beginning looks like a scribble!

What Counts as a Scribble?

A scribble can be:

  • Random lines while you’re thinking
  • Doodles in the margin of a notebook
  • Quick shapes that turn into something later
  • Loose marks made with crayons, pens, markers, or chalk

Scribbling is often compared to doodling—simple drawing without pressure. It’s not about getting it “right.” It’s about letting your mind and hand move freely.

Why Scribbling Is Worth Celebrating

Scribbling may look small, but it can do big things:

It lowers the pressure.
You’re not trying to create a masterpiece. You’re just making marks.

It wakes up your imagination.
Many artists, designers, and writers use messy sketches as the first step toward a finished idea.

It’s a gentle way to relax.
A few minutes of drawing shapes, loops, or patterns can feel calming—like a brain “reset.”

It connects us to earlier days.
If you ever spent time with coloring books, school notebooks, greeting cards, or hand-written letters, scribbling can bring back that simple, familiar joy.

Easy Ways to Celebrate International Scribble Day

You don’t need special talent or fancy supplies. Pick one (or a few) of these:

1) Start with a 5-minute scribble warm-up
Set a timer for five minutes. Fill a page with lines, circles, zigzags—anything. Don’t erase. Don’t judge.

2) Turn a scribble into a character
Make one messy scribble, then add:

  • Two eyes
  • A mouth
  • A hat, bow, or silly hair
    Suddenly it has a personality—this is one of the classic ways the day is celebrated.

3) Make “memory scribbles”
Create simple scribbles that represent memories:

  • A wavy line for a road trip
  • A spiral for a busy season of life
  • Little loops for people you love
    Write one sentence next to each.

4) Scribble while listening to music
Put on a favorite old song, jazz station, or calming playlist. Let the beat guide your lines.

5) Try a “one-color challenge”
Use only one pen or marker. See how many different patterns you can make with the same color.

6) Share scribbles with family (no critique allowed!)
If you’re with kids or grandkids, make it a rule: everyone shares one page, and everyone gets a compliment.

7) Create a kitchen-table art moment
Leave paper and markers out after dinner. People will often scribble “just because” when supplies are already there.

Scribble Ideas You Can Print and Use Anytime

If you want a quick starting point, try these prompts:

  • Scribble a storm cloud, then add lightning
  • Scribble a “messy bouquet” of flowers
  • Scribble a map of an imaginary town
  • Scribble three shapes, then connect them
  • Scribble your name without lifting your pen
  • Scribble a border around a page, then fill it with patterns

A Simple Scribble Day Tradition to Try

Here’s a fun tradition you can repeat every year:

  1. Date the page: March 27 (and the year)
  2. Make one big scribble
  3. Turn it into something (a face, an animal, a place, anything)
  4. Write one line at the bottom: “Today I started.”

Over the years, you’ll build a stack of pages that shows how your creativity (and mood) changes from one year to the next.

Talking Points

  • When was the last time you drew or doodled just for fun?
  • Do you remember doodling in school notebooks? What did you draw?
  • Have you ever had a good idea start out messy, then become something great?
  • What’s one creative hobby you’d like to revisit—or try for the first time?
  • If your scribble could talk today, what would it say?

May your lines be wild, your page be free, and your inner critic take the day off. Happy International Scribble Day—go make a beautiful mess!

#Hashtags
#InternationalScribbleDay #ScribbleDay #CreativityForAll #DoodleArt #ArtForFun #SimpleJoy #MindfulMoments #TrySomethingNew #CreativeBreak #HandsOnFun

Tags
International Scribble Day, Scribble Day, creativity, doodling, drawing prompts, stress relief activities, art journaling, simple art ideas, family activities, mindfulness

BLT
EDITOR
PROFILE

Posts Carousel