New Pongal Rangoli and Simple Sankranti Muggulu Designs Kolam 7×1 Dots for Beginners

Beginner ⏱ 4 min Updated May 24, 2026

Kolam for Pongal · February 25, 2026

This pongal rangoli and simple tutorial walks you through every step from the dot grid to the final pattern.

New Pongal Rangoli and Simple Sankranti Muggulu Designs Kolam 7x1 Dots for Beginners
New Pongal Rangoli and Simple Sankranti Muggulu Designs Kolam 7×1 Dots for Beginners — step-by-step video tutorial

For another beginner-friendly variation, try Sankranthi Pedha Chukkala Muggulu.

Learn more about the tradition of Rangoli on Wikipedia.

Rangoli 2 is the kind of design that looks intricate but is genuinely beginner-friendly once you follow the dot grid.

Welcome to a collection of beautiful rangoli, muggulu, and traditional kolam designs for every occasion. In this channel, you will find step-by-step tutorials for rangoli designs, simple rangoli, and structured kolam with dots patterns. Whether you are looking for classic chukkala muggulu, creative pulli kolam, or elegant vilakku kolam, each design is explained clearly and in an easy-to-follow format. If you enjoy drawing rangoli design patterns for festivals, daily decoration, or special occasions like sankranthi muggulu, this channel provides structured guidance for beginners and experienced artists alike.

Traditional chukki rangoli and dots rangoli patterns Easy and neat simple kolam designs Compact small rangoli designs for entrances

Classic muggulu designs and muggulu simple layouts Step-by-step kolam designs simple tutorials From beginner-friendly simple rangoli designs to festive and traditional muggulu chukkala muggulu, each tutorial focuses on symmetry, smooth curves, and clean dot placement.

If you are searching for: rangoli designs with dots easy rangoli tutorials

structured kolangal patterns neat chukkala muggulu simple designs You are in the right place.

Watch the videos step by step, practice the dot placement carefully, and transform simple grids into beautiful rangoli art. Subscribe for more traditional and modern rangoli, kolam, and muggulu patterns updated regularly.

Tip: Use chalk to lightly mark your dot grid first — it wipes away cleanly once your rangoli is finished.

About this design: Pongal Rangoli And Simple is a beginner-friendly pattern that comes together in just a few minutes. Once you have practised the pongal rangoli and simple dot grid, you can scale it up for festival mornings or scale it down for a daily doorstep. Many learners on our channel make this pongal rangoli and simple their go-to design once they get the rhythm of the curves.

Pongal Rangoli And Simple — Step by Step Guide

Use the steps below as a reference card while the video plays. Most learners finish on the second attempt.

  1. Clear a flat surface and set down your dot grid using rice flour or chalk.
  2. Confirm the dot spacing is even — uneven dots are the biggest cause of wobbly curves.
  3. Begin tracing from the centre outward, following the curves shown in the video above.
  4. Fill the petals and sections with your chosen colours, working one area at a time.
  5. Finish the edges with a fine line for a sharp, photograph-ready result.

What You Will Learn

  • Rangoli
  • Muggulu
  • Chukkala Muggulu
  • Rangoli Designs
  • Simple Rangoli
  • Kolam

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I draw this rangoli?

Start by marking an even dot grid on a flat, clean surface. Once the grid is in place, connect the dots following the curves shown in the video. Even spacing between dots is the single biggest factor for a clean finish.

Is this suitable for beginners?

Yes — this design is shaped specifically with newcomers in mind. The dot grid is small enough to manage, and the curves are gentle. Most learners get it right by the second try.

What materials do I need?

Powder (white for outlines, colours for filling), a flat surface, and a dot stencil if you want absolute precision. Beyond that, just your hand and a steady pace.

How long does it take?

The video clocks in at 3 min 41 sec. Allow about quarter of an hour to draw the design at a comfortable pace.

When you draw this, focus on the first three dots — get those right and the whole pattern follows. The rest is just patience and a steady hand.

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