How to Paint a Realistic Watercolor Fish Tank Background

Melanie L. Marten
A store-bought fish tank background is usually a solid blue or black, or has a shiny aquarium scene complete with plants and rock pictures. While this solution to aquarium decor works, some desire a less picturesque backdrop. Creating a soft-focus yet still realistic watercolor fish tank background is a great solution.

Watercolor Fish Tank Background - Materials Needed

The most important material for the fish tank background is a piece of watercolor paper, or other suitable material, that covers the entire back side of your aquarium. You will also need watercolor paint in dark blues, greens, and black, water, and paintbrushes. Paper towels for clean up are also a great idea. To affix the fish tank background to your tank, double sided clear tape is ideal, although you can use regular tape as well.

Watercolor Fish Tank Background - Painting Tips

In order to make a realistic watercolor fish tank background, you should start with a dark background color. Since you want the lights in the tank to focus on your colorful fish, the backdrop should not be bright and garish.

Begin by painting the entire piece of paper with a dark blue color. Use a horizontal stroke motion instead of a verticle one. This looks more like natural variations in water layers. You can use green or black to vary the tint of the blue layers slightly. The bottom part of the fish tank background should be darker than the top.

Watercolor Fish Tank Background - Decorating Tips

After you have the basic dark blue color for the backdrop, you may want to decorate the fish tank background with some rock or plant pictures. Match the colors and styles of rock paintings to the ones you are using in your aquarium. The idea is to make shadowy images of rocks and plants, unless you are a great artist and can draw ones that are totally realistic.

Use black, dark grey, and browns to paint rock shapes on the fish tank background. Then, mix darker green colors and paint plants. Simple ribbon-shaped leaf patterns are a good choice for less-than-perfect painters. Skinny stalks with oval leaves can imitate Amazon sword plants. Small round leaved paintings can look realistic too.

Using a realistic watercolor fish tank background for your home aquarium is an attractive alternative to store-bought ones. By remembering to keep the colors dark and subdued, your fish tank will appear to be a real pond or river bed. Behind the decorations and real or plastic plants, the watercolor fish tank background will add a beautiful touch to your home aquarium.

Published by Melanie L. Marten

Melanie Marten is self-taught and self-employed. Besides freelance writing, she dabbles in website design and owns dozens of websites and blogs. Work is squeezed in between parenting two boys, homeschoolin...  View profile

  • The most important material for the fish tank background is a piece of watercolor paper.
  • In order to make a realistic watercolor fish tank background, you should start with a dark color.

9 Comments

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  • Mahesh5/20/2012

    nice idea

  • Tony Vega7/13/2008

    Very creative ideas!

  • Joanney Uthe7/4/2008

    Great article and a fun idea.

  • Secretsides7/1/2008

    I love it! I am a watercolorist, and my son is into aquariums, I will try this.

  • Carol Bengle Gilbert7/1/2008

    I imagine your house to be wall to wall aquariums!

  • Stephen Joltin7/1/2008

    Great project. I have many friends who might like to do this and will forward your URL to them.

  • J P Whickson7/1/2008

    This is so neat. Got to try it.

  • Tammy White7/1/2008

    Creative idea:)

  • Derek Odom6/30/2008

    Hey cool!! I will show this to my buddy who has kids this weekend, I'm going to his house for a party! Wish I knew some of this stuff when I was young LOL!

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