What Are The Best Drawing For Girls Tutorials Online?

2025-11-04 05:27:58 68

4 Answers

Olive
Olive
2025-11-05 23:53:29
I get this itch to find the perfect tutorials — I go through that hunt constantly — and for girls (whether anime-style, stylized, or realistic) I always mix a few types of lessons. For basics and anatomy I lean on Proko for clear, no-nonsense breakdowns of the skull, facial planes, and proportions; pairing that with 'Figure Drawing for All It's Worth' and 'Drawing the Head and Hands' really solidified my foundation. For stylized faces and hair I binge Mark Crilley's step-by-steps and Loish's process videos, because they show how to bend rules while keeping things believable.

Once I have the bones, I practice expression sheets, hands, and hair in short timed sessions using line-of-action and Quickposes for reference. For color and digital painting, Ctrl+Paint and Ross Tran's color videos helped me loosen up and pick palettes that flatter feminine features. I sprinkle in Drawabox lessons to keep my linework crisp. Mix books, YouTube creators, and daily drills — that combo changed my sketches from flat to alive, and I still love discovering a tiny trick that makes a hair strand or eye pop.
Xenia
Xenia
2025-11-06 22:51:37
If I want cute, quick wins I go straight to Mark Crilley for clean anime-style girl tutorials, and then practice hair and eyes repeatedly until muscle memory kicks in. For more grounded portraits I turn to Proko and the Loomis books — 'Drawing the Head and Hands' especially — because those teach proportions that work across styles. I also use Pinterest and ArtStation to build mood boards and Line-of-Action for pose drills; combining reference with short, focused tutorials is my favorite fast-track. After a few weeks of that routine my characters start to feel like they belong in the same world, which is incredibly satisfying.
Reese
Reese
2025-11-07 02:17:42
Late-night scribbles and messy sketchbooks taught me to approach tutorials like recipes: I take the parts I need and improvise. I often start with a gesture drawing to lock down pose and rhythm, then watch a short YouTube tutorial — I usually pick one from Sycra or Loish for stylized shapes, or Proko for anatomy — and pause frequently to replicate each step. I also collect a few reference sheets: hair swatches, clothing folds, and a handful of face-turn templates. Sometimes I study a single artist's process for a week (for example, tracing a few of Loish's thumbnails to learn her silhouette choices) and other times I follow a book chapter, like the ones in 'Drawing the Head and Hands'. Over months this shifting focus (structure week, expression week, color week) sharpened my ability to draw girls with consistent character and mood. It’s a slow burn, but seeing a sketch evolve into something expressive never gets old.
Kate
Kate
2025-11-07 17:56:40
Practicality matters to me, so I organize tutorials by skill and timeframe. If I have ten minutes, I do eye or mouth studies on YouTube (Proko and Mark Crilley have short focused clips). If I have an hour, I follow a full face or hair tutorial and then immediately redraw it three times from memory. For foundational work I use Drawabox for structure, then supplement with 'Figure Drawing for All It's Worth' to understand proportions better. For digital techniques, Ctrl+Paint's free lessons gave me stepwise exercises that translate well to tablets. I also recommend Schoolism or Skillshare classes if you want a guided course with feedback, and Line-of-Action for live figure practice. Practicing in small, repeatable routines helped my drawings of girls improve steadily without burning out — that's what keeps me drawing week after week.
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