What does your child’s drawing reveal?
 

AI-powered analysis uncovers your child’s emotions and psychological state through their drawings.

What can drawings reveal?

  • Anxiety or stress: drawings may indicate hidden fears, worries, or emotional struggles.
  • Attitude towards family and friends: they show how a child perceives themselves and others.
  • Hidden conflicts: small details in drawings can hint at unresolved emotions or inner tensions.

Why analyze children’s drawings?

  • Provide timely support - identify emotional signals and help address them.
  • Strengthen relationships – better understand your child’s feelings without words.
  • Encourage healthy development – reduce anxiety and build confidence.

How it works

Upload your child’s drawing

Take a photo of your child’s drawing and upload it for analysis. This is the first step to understanding their emotions more deeply.

Upload your child’s drawing

Answer a few short questions

To ensure an accurate and helpful analysis, please answer a few simple questions about the context of the drawing.

Answer a few short questions

View the analysis results

You’ll receive an in-depth psychological analysis of the drawing, including advice for parents. The result can be saved as a PDF.

View the analysis results

Plans for Analyzing Children’s Drawings

Intro Offer

0.29

Instant access to Family plan for the first month.

Try the full experience for a symbolic price.

Light

0.99
  • Up to 3 analyses per month
  • 1 child profile

For occasional use.

Family

1.99
  • Up to 10 analyses per month
  • Up to 3 child profiles

Best for family use.

Pro

4.99
  • Up to 50 analyses per month
  • Unlimited child profiles

Ideal for professionals and educators.

What do scientists say about the analysis of children’s drawings?

Carl Jung

Jung believed that drawings and other forms of creativity are a way of expressing the unconscious. He studied archetypes and symbols that appear in the creativity of both children and adults, considering them as a tool for understanding inner experiences. His works, particularly “Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious”, laid the foundation for the modern approach to the analysis of drawings in psychology.

Karen Machover

In 1949, Machover developed the “Draw-a-Person Test”, a projective test used in psychological diagnostics to assess a child’s personality traits and emotional state. According to her theory, details of the drawing (such as figure size, positioning, and pencil pressure) can indicate self-esteem, anxiety levels, and underlying conflicts.

Cathy Malchiodi

A modern art therapy researcher and author of the books “Understanding Children’s Drawings” and “The Art Therapy Sourcebook”. She emphasizes that children’s drawings are not just random images but an important means of communication. She explores how color, lines, and symbols in drawings can reflect emotional trauma and a child’s psychological state.

Reviews

Olena

A practicing child psychologist

For children, drawing is a way of communication, a story about their psycho-emotional state: joy, happiness, satisfaction, calmness, confidence, or anxiety, fear, sadness, depression, shame; about closeness, attachment, life challenges, and achievements.

With the help of paper and pencils - through lines, color schemes, size, and storyline - we can glimpse a child’s inner world and, if necessary, provide support.

A helpful companion in this process can be a service that deciphers and analyzes drawings, offering accurate and reliable interpretations. It can suggest multiple alternative hypotheses or highlight specific aspects, providing a wide selection of predefined themes.

FAQ