![]() ![]() Image 3: This part is optional, but will help guide you if you often catch yourself getting lost in the details while shading. Which I also recommend you do because it’s hard to fix something if you get the head proportions/angle wrong. Usually when I draw, I work on these things last. Image 2: For the sake of making this tutorial look more interesting, I went ahead and shaded the background, clothes and hair. I had to draw mine 3x darker because the scanned image showed up blank. Keep your under layer as faint as possible. Image 1: I used a blunt HB pencil to draw the outlines for the face. You can take this a little bit further by adding cast shadows as well. To do that, you can create a planar head/face of your subject, add a light source and shade the individual planes using solid tones or gradients relative to the direction and intensity of the light(s). Proper proportions aside, it is highly important that you figure out the lighting situation for the scene before you shade the face to identify patterns of light and be able to apply the right amount of value where appropriate. If you read my shading tutorial, you will need to apply your knowledge of light and your practice with planes in this section. How to Shade a Face Step 1: Lighting the Face
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