Where Can Artists Find Videos On How To Draw A Face Easy?

2026-01-31 21:45:40 76
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5 Answers

Mia
Mia
2026-02-01 02:43:16
Lately I prefer concise, focused tutorials. Quick YouTube lessons that show head construction in three to five steps are my go-to because they teach repeatable rules. Look for videos that emphasize simple geometric forms — spheres for craniums and boxes for jawlines — and that give clear placement ratios for eyes, nose, and mouth.

Apart from channels, using apps like Quickposes or Line of Action alongside video lessons has helped me translate what I watch into muscle memory. I mix short studies with a longer weekly portrait, and over a month the faces feel much more natural. It’s a satisfying, steady improvement that keeps me drawing every day.
Donovan
Donovan
2026-02-01 19:57:12
If you’re chasing straightforward face tutorials, I usually recommend starting with YouTube and filtering by beginner-friendly playlists. Search phrases that work for me are “basic head construction,” “5-minute portrait tutorial,” and “simplified facial proportions.” Channels that focus on step-by-step proportions and feature placement tend to be the most helpful — they’ll show you how to map eyes, nose, and mouth using simple shapes rather than overwhelming detail.

Short-form platforms are great for tricks and shortcuts: TikTok and Instagram reels give bite-sized tips on shading, symmetry, and simplifying hair. For deeper practice, I’ll switch to paid courses on Skillshare or Udemy for structured lessons that build from fundamentals to portrait polish. Combine long lessons for understanding with short clips for quick reminders; that combo keeps me motivated and improves my faces faster than any single resource alone. Personally, collecting a playlist and doing timed studies every day has been a game-changer.
Luke
Luke
2026-02-02 14:37:48
I've got a routine that pairs learning and doing, and the best video sources fit neatly into that loop. First I watch an anatomy-based tutorial—those that explain planes of the face and muscle groups—so I understand why things look the way they do. Next I follow a stylistic tutorial that adapts those rules into a simplified method: cartoonish proportions, chibi faces, or semi-real portraits depending on my mood.

After watching, I set a practice timer: three 2-minute gesture faces, two 10-minute studies, and one 30-minute portrait using a paused section of the tutorial as a reference. Community critique helps: I post progress in a Discord or Reddit group and learn from feedback. Supplement with 'Drawing the Head and Hands' for classic techniques, and mix in live streams where artists solve problems on the fly. That structure keeps learning efficient and surprisingly fun — I love how each session reveals something new about proportion and expression.
Isaac
Isaac
2026-02-04 11:51:02
If I’m in the mood for quick inspiration, I turn to short tutorial reels and compilations that focus on one thing at a time, like how to draw a nose or lay out eyes. Hashtags like #howtodrawaface or #portraittutorial make it easy to find snackable tips on Instagram and TikTok, which are great for warming up before a longer session.

For deeper study I bookmark longer YouTube videos that teach head construction and do step-by-step copies. Mixing formats — quick reels for tricks, long videos for fundamentals, and practice apps for repetition — keeps my progress steady without getting bored. I usually finish a week of practice feeling more confident about proportions, which always brightens my sketching mood.
Bella
Bella
2026-02-06 09:19:49
Whenever I want to learn a fresh way to sketch a face quickly, I head straight to video platforms and treat them like a buffet. I’ll spend one session on a detailed tutorial and the next on a 60-second reel — both teach different muscles in my brain. Start with YouTube channels that break down construction: look for lessons that explain the skull, the center line, and simple planes. A handful of creators show step-by-step face construction using Loomis-style guidelines and easy shortcuts that actually stick.

I also keep a short list of resources: playlists for slow, anatomy-focused lessons; bite-sized TikToks for quick reminders; and longer livestreams for watching someone think through a portrait in real time. If you want books to pair with videos, I swear by 'Figure Drawing for All It's Worth' and 'Drawing the Head and Hands' — they pair nicely with a good Proko or Aaron Blaise video. Practice by pausing videos and doing 5–10 minute copies, then compare. It’s the mix of watching, doing, and repeating that makes faces feel easy to draw; I still enjoy the little ‘aha’ moments when a cheekbone finally clicks.
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