Sensory Details
Transform flat descriptions into vivid, immersive experiences by engaging all five senses. Sensory details don't just paint pictures—they create emotional connections that make readers feel like they're inside your story.
The One-Line Transformation
See how senses bring a scene to life:
"The kitchen was busy."
"The kitchen clattered with pans, the sharp tang of garlic rising through clouds of steam."
What Are Sensory Details?
Sensory details are specific, concrete descriptions that appeal to one or more of the five senses: sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch. Instead of saying "The room was crowded and loud," you might write "Bodies pressed against mine as voices collided in a deafening roar."
When you use sensory details, readers don't just understand your scene—they experience it through their own senses. This transforms good writing into great writing.
The Hidden Secret
Most students only use sight. They describe what things look like but forget the other four senses. Using just 2–3 senses together instantly elevates your writing above the average response and catches NSW markers' attention.
The Five Senses: What to Describe
Here's what each sense can bring to your writing. Keep this as a mental checklist when you revise.
Sight
- colours
- light and shadow
- shapes
- movement
- patterns
Sound
- volume and tone
- onomatopoeia
- silence
- rhythm
- echo
Smell
- sharp and sweet
- musty and fresh
- smoke
- decay
- spice
Taste
- bitter and metallic
- honey-sweet
- salty
- sour
- tongue texture
Touch
- rough and silky
- burning and freezing
- prickly
- wet
- pressure
Before & After: Sensory Examples
Click through these examples to see how different senses transform vague descriptions into vivid, engaging writing.
"The sunset was beautiful."
This tells us what's happening but doesn't engage the senses.
"Streaks of amber and violet bled across the horizon, gilding the clouds in molten light."
Why NSW Markers Notice This
Language Score
Sensory details demonstrate sophisticated vocabulary and mature descriptive ability. They show markers you understand how to use language to create mood and atmosphere—a hallmark of high-scoring responses.
Engagement Score
Stories that engage multiple senses are more memorable and immersive. Markers notice when you've created a world they can step into, not just read about.
What Markers See
When a marker reads "It was cold," they see basic writing. When they read "The frost bit her bare fingers and turned each breath into a silver cloud," they see a writer with sophisticated technique who understands how to make readers feel the scene. That's the difference between passing and excelling.
Try It Yourself
Rewrite this flat description using at least 2-3 senses. Think about what your character feels, hears, smells, and tastes—not just what they see.
"The beach was nice on that summer day."
Tips for Practicing Sensory Writing
Pick a Location, Not a Concept
Don't try to describe "happiness"—that's abstract. Instead, describe a specific place: a beach, a kitchen, a library. Now ask: what would each sense notice there?
Use Specific Vocabulary
Don't say "the air smelled" or "the food tasted." Instead, name the smell: "the sharp tang of vinegar" or "the bitter metallic taste." Specific nouns and adjectives make senses come alive.
Don't Overdo It
You don't need all five senses in every sentence. 2-3 senses layered together is powerful. Too many becomes overwhelming and feels artificial.
Use Senses to Show Emotion
Emotions change how we perceive the world. When scared, sounds feel louder. When excited, colours seem brighter. Let senses reveal how your character feels.
Practice Sensory Details in the Writing Gym
Understanding sensory details is step one. Our Writing Gym gives you targeted exercises where you'll practice adding senses to flat descriptions, with instant AI feedback on every attempt.