How to Draw a Body Step by Step Easy
Welcome to this step by step tutorial. Here you will learn how to draw the human body from a 3/4 view. I choose this view because the majority of tutorials teach you how to draw a person from a front or profile view. This is useful of course, but your final drawing will look too flat and rigid. The most common view used in drawings is the 3/4, especially if you are a concept artist. This view gives a real sensation of depth and three-dimensionality to the characters.
So, How to draw the human body?
If you want to draw the human body, you should follow this simple 6 step by step process:
- Step 1: First you gotta draw the torso, with the rib cage and the abdomen. Do not focus on muscles and focus on general shape and form.
- Step 2: Draw the hips. Again make it simple. You can draw this area of the body like an if it was a short underwear.
- Step 3: Draw the shoulders and the arms. Simple shapes like an ellipse for the shoulder, tubes for the arms, and squares for the hands will do the trick.
- Step 4: Draw the legs. Use tubes for the thighs and the shins, and triangles for the feet.
- Step 5: Draw the head. You can do it by drawing an ellipse and dividing the different planes of the head.
- Step 6: Draw the facial features. The eyes, the nose, the lips, ears, and hair. All on top of your dummy's head.
- Step 7: Draw the rest of the body on top of your dummy.
This tutorial can be followed no matter what medium you use, traditional or digital. In any case, if after finishing this tutorial you wanna know more about how to improve your drawing skills and become proficient in character drawing, you should check my course on "How to Draw Characters Like a Pro" , when I teach the techniques and methods professional artist use when drawing characters.
Now let´s go more in-depth and explain each step of the tutorial. But, before we start, you need to understand the importance of proportions.
Why proportions are so important?
Like I told you my objective here is to draw a well-proportion dummy. Teaching my students I realize for beginners is much easy if we focus on creating a dummy instead of going for muscle groups when drawing a person. Newbies tend to focus on drawing perfectly the biceps or the pecs and forget about the big picture: well-balanced proportions.
Let's start with the tutorial.
The 8 heads
As you can see in the image above, I placed 8 heads, one on top of each other. Those 8 heads will represent the ideal human body proportions. They will help us measure the different parts of the body.
Step 1: Drawing from the torso
I always start drawing the torso . The reason is that the torso dictates the whole position of the body. Once you have the torso and the hips placed, to draw the head and the limbs become way easier.
In my case, when I'm drawing the torso I'm doing it like one big part. Other people prefer to draw the ribcage first and the abdomen after. You can choose whatever method you prefer. Once I have the torso drawn, I proceed to divide the rib cage from the abdomen with a curve line. This curve line will cross the center of the torso. In his higher part will mark the end of the breastbone and the lower chest. On the sides will tell us were the floating ribs will be placed.
On top of the torso, I also draw another curve. This one will define were the clavicle will be situated. Above the clavicle, I will draw an ellipse. This ellipse will define where the neck will be placed.
As you already notice, one head is the distance between the base of the neck and the lower chest line.
Divide the torso
Finally, I like to divide the torso with a vertical line. This line goes from the neck to the hips . It is very important because it will help us to understand where the division between both pectoral muscles will be and where the belly button will be placed.
Because we are drawing our character from a 3/4 view, both divisions of the torso will have different sizes. The nearest side to the viewer will be bigger and the farthest will be smaller.
As a final comment on this section, I want to highlight the fact that the distance from the lower chest to the belly bottom will be another head. If all this sounds a little bit confusing in the begging, don't worry just keep practicing, keeping in mind the fundamentals I'm showing you in this tutorial. One resource I found very useful was a simple but effective video course I took years ago which helped me to understand better the fundamentals of drawing, not only people and anatomy, also perspective and composition. The lectures were easy to follow and I could feel my drawing skills were improving after each lesson.
Step 2: Drawing the hips
Drawing the hips will be the next step in our journey. I usually draw the hips and the crotch like if our dummy was wearing a short swimsuit or male underwear. It simplifies the process creation and makes things easier to understand.
Take notice the distance from the belly button to the crotch area equals another head.
Step 3: Drawing for the shoulders and the arms
Once I have the torso and the hips in place, I will move forward and start drawing my limbs.
First of all, will be the shoulders. I've seen many people drawing the shoulder like a couple of egg-shaped spheres. In my case, I do the same, but I also like to draw the top part of this inverted egg flatter. The reason is this allows the descending line of the traps to continue on the deltoids. The result is a more natural and fluid body line.
For the biceps and triceps area, I will draw a tube for each arm. This tube will become narrower on the bottom. Here will be connected to the elbow.
Drawing the elbow and the forearms
The elbow will be situated on the same height of the floating ribs, on the sides of the torso.
For the forearms, we will draw also a tube for each arm. Like before, they will become narrower on the bottom part. In this case, the bottom part will be the wrist. More or less, both wrists will be aligned with the crotch on the hips area.
The hands
For not over complicate this process too much, I will draw the hands as two fists . I will draw them quite schematically. For the fist placed frontally we will draw a big irregular square for the palm. The fingers will be drawn as little rectangles.
For the hand placed sideways, the main body of the hand will be a rectangle and the fingers again will be drawn as single squares.
Later on, you can define better the fingers, the knuckles, etc.. but for now is more important to focus on the big picture and have a well-proportion figure in general.
Step 4: Drawing the legs
The next chapter on our journey will be to draw the legs. For each thigh will draw a thick tube. This tube will connect the hips with the knees. The same way we did for the arms, these tubes will become narrower on the bottom area where the thigh connects with the knee.
This time the distance from the crotch to the kneecaps will be 2 heads.
The lower leg
Below the knees, we will find the shins and the calves. This lower part of the leg will be drawn differently depending on the position of the legs.
The leg drawn frontally will present two sides:
-The exterior side. This side will be drawn with a very short curve line on top and a long curve line under, which will end on the feet.
-The interior side. This side will have a similar distribution. It will present a curve line on top and another one under. The curve line on top will be longer than the one on the exterior side, but still shorter if we compare it with the curve line bellow that follows until it reaches the feet.
The feet
The feet will be represented as geometric shapes. The one placed frontally to the viewer can be easily understood if we draw it like an isosceles trapezoid.
In the case of the feet placed sideways, this one will be easily understood if we draw it like a scalene triangle.
Remember the interior side of the feet is more concave in shape, and the exterior side will be more convex.
Step 5: Drawing the head
For the head, we will draw a sphere which will represent the cranium and the face . This sphere will be placed on top of the ellipse we drew for the neck. Under the sphere, we will draw a square. This square will be the jaw of our dummy. Once we have the head placed, we will connect it to the body drawing the neck.
We will draw a horizontal curve across the sphere. This curve will cross the middle of the sphere and will define where the eyebrows will be placed. Following this same line, we will draw the ears on the side of the sphere. Then we will divide the whole head with another vertical line. Remember our head is in a 3/4 view, so both parts will have different sizes as we did for the torso. When I was a beginner artist struggling to learn how to draw the human body, I decided to search for information on the web so I could educate myself on the matter. After 12 years of non-stop learning learning , I created this video course called "How to draw characters" I compiled all my drawing knowledge in more than 4 hours of video footage, divided in 11 lectures + 2 hours of bonus videos.
Step 6: Detailing the head
Now it's time to start drawing on top of our dummy. Before we start drawing the body features we will need to erase partially the dummy. The reason is pretty simple. You don't want your dummy sketch interfering with your final lineart. At the same time, you don't want to lose the work you did drawing the dummy, because this will serve you like the base structure on top of which you will draw the final drawing. If we want to compare it with something, think in the beams of a building( this will be your dummy) and the facade is the final lineart with all the facial and body features ( skin, muscles, hair, etc…)
If you are working with pencil and paper, you can use a kneaded eraser for erasing the dummy's sketch without removing it completely.
When drawing the face you should start following the vertical line in the middle of the dummy's face. The middle point between the eyebrows and the chin will be where the nostrils of the nose will be placed. The middle point between the nostrils and the chin will be where the lower lip will be located. The eyes will be drawn as two curves for the upper eyelids. A circle with a dot inside, representing the iris and the pupil, will be drawn under each eyelid.
Due to the nature of the posse of the head, the eyelid of the farthest eye will be drawn as a narrow curve and the one from the closest eye will be drawn wider.
Remember that the sides of the mouth will align perfectly with the center of each eye.
If you are interested in learning more about drawing faces, feel free to check my step by step tutorial "How to draw Faces".
Step 7: Drawing the body
When drawing the body you gotta follow the underlying structure we created when drawing the dummy. If you follow the original proportions, drawing the anatomy will become quite easy. Nevertheless, you can find some trouble when drawing the hands and the feet, mostly due to the fingers and the toes placements.
The hands
Drawing the hands could be somewhat challenging if the hands are open and the fingers partially or fully extended. In this case, both fists appear close in a clenching fist. The only concern here is to place correctly the knuckles and of course, don't forget to follow the hand sketch we created when drawing the dummy. The knuckles should always be drawn on top of the fingers, with knuckle bone align with the center of the finger. Knuckles are small joints that allow some range of movement to our fingers, so placing them well aligned with their respective finger is vital in order to draw a believable hand.
The feet
When drawing the dummy's feet we didn't draw any toes. I didn't do it before because I wanted to keep your focus on drawing correctly the general body proportions. But don't worry, drawing the toes is quite simple. Start drawing the big toe on the interior side of the tip of each foot. From there you should place the rest of the toes in succession. Remember the second toe, near to the big one, is almost as long as it's bigger brother. From this second toe, you should draw the other 3 in succession and each one shorter than the previous one, and one behind the other.
Regarding the feet placed almost sideways, the only toe fully visible will the big one. The other four will be barely visible behind their big brother.
The rest of the body should not present a real challenge as long as you draw the muscles similar to what I did in the image below. As an advice, try not to draw fully the muscles. This is a typical mistake, beginner artist do when drawing the human body. I think is due to the superhero comics, where the character's bodies appear totally ripped like if it was no skin on top of the muscles. A realistic body, even if it's an athletic person, will have some amount of fat between the muscles and the skin. This is why you shouldn't draw fully the lines separating one muscle or muscle groups from others.
Let's take the deltoid muscles for example. As you can see, the didn't draw fully the division between the bottom of the shoulders and the biceps and triceps. I preferred to suggest them instead. This will give a more realistic feeling to your drawings.
Conclusion
Here is a quick summary of the tutorial you can use as a cheat sheet. If you are going to post it online, please refer this article as the source :) :
As always, I hope you found this tutorial useful. If you wanna learn more about other tutorials you can check the "Drawing Tutorials" section on the top menu. There you will find cool tutorials about drawing dragons, superheroes, video game characters, and many more. Also, if you are interested in learning how to become a professional artist, you can check my article "How to become a concept artist" where I explain the steps you should follow if you wanna pursue this career.
So feel free to check both :).
Hope to see you around more.
Toni Justamante Jacobs.
Source: https://improveyourdrawings.com/2018/04/how-to-draw-the-human-body-in-a-3-4-view/
0 Response to "How to Draw a Body Step by Step Easy"
Post a Comment