Guidelines For Pencil Portrait Drawing – Doing Hair

Sketching hair is dictated by several aspects: the type of hair, its color, quality, quantity, the arrangement and styling of the hair, the individuality and mood of the model or the photograph, and the light effect upon the hair.

The arabesque of the hair is part of the overall construct. A correct construct is relevant to the likeness of the hair. Many novice draftspersons start with the face and grow outward from there. This is however a poor approach and instills bad habits that will prove difficult to overcome.

In fact, the arabesque is especially relevant when draw a hairdo. Attempting to draw the hair working from the inside out, bit by bit, is a recipe for failure. The hair will end up in being either too small for the skull or too large.

Drawing within the construct of the coiffure, first put in the main darks. These darks are best seen by squinting until a general pattern of light and dark is seen.

Next, you need to stump down the graphite in a painterly manner following the overall gesture and movement of the coiffure. For this you can utilize your fingers, a tissue, or a paper stump. If you utilize a paper stump be cautious not to deaden the look. If you utilize your fingers make sure they are dry and also wipe them constantly with a paper towel.

Then, utilize your kneaded eraser like a loaded paint brush to pick out the essential lights. Do not be overly fussy here. A more virtuoso approach effects a sense of life and rhythm into the coiffure. If you make a mistake just stump down the graphite again with your fingers or stump and do it again.

Sometimes when you block-in the coiffure other light parts of the skull pop out. This is one rationale why sketching the skull as a whole is necessary.

French braiding is a beautiful coiffure style, but extremely complex and hard to sketch. The idea is to draw these French braids fluidly and with movement. A balancing act is required here: the complexity of the coiffure’s styling is best handled by first line-drawing the main locks and braids. As you map out the braids be sure to plumb and carefully size and place each main lock and braid.

When sketching from a photograph there is the temptation to copy it down to the smallest detail. You may or may not give in to this temptation but you should always make sure that the coiffure maintains its liveliness. However, in most cases, you will not need to map out every detail.

Further block-in the darks taking into account the direction and gesture of the essential locks of the coiffure. The hardest thing is to avoid from plunging into an area of detail. Not to do this requires mental discipline. Best is to follow a layered approach that progressively stacks the arrangement of the coiffure, lock by lock.

You also should soften the edges of the coiffure line so that it blends into the forehead and sides of the face. Hair does this naturally.

Be sure to used sharp pencils because dull pencils lead to dull, lifeless coiffures.

Having first mapped out and blocked-in the essential locks of hair makes the drawing of the finer areas much easier, but is still labor intensive. You should be prepared to spend quite a bit of time on a coiffure.

Also, step back from the drawing to maintain an overview of the main light/dark pattern because detailing can result in a flat mess in which the tones close in on each other.

Restrain yourself from drawing bangs too early in the process. This helps ensure that the coiffure and flesh can be unified into a unified sense of spirit.

Sketching coiffures so that it reads naturally and has a rhythmic gesture is challenging. Ordinarily it takes as much time and effort to render the coiffure as it does the face and neck. You must spend as much care in prepping the coiffure as you would for the rest of the portrait. If you draw from life be sure you do the coiffure before your model takes a rest because the coiffure will very likely have changed when the break is over. The strategy, then, is to devote a whole 20 to 30 minutes of a pose segment to the coiffure.

With these procedures you can be certain that in time your sketched coiffures will look authentic and lively. Do not forget that drawing coiffure takes time so that you do not get impatient.