
#DISNEY FEMALE FACE SHAPES HOW TO#
So here I am going to show you how to draw a Disney like female characters. Warm-up - In this lecture you will learn how to warm up to start drawing Disney-like characters, how: Hi there. This and much, much more, you will find in discourse, the best time to start was yesterday, to next best is now. How to add shading to the face, how to use simple shapes to draw a mouth, and how to draw noses, and eyes and hair, but also how to draw emotions or characters. So what are we going to warn here? We're going to learn how to find the proportions of the face and how to draw a face from the front and from a profile. Believe me, he will be surprised how easy it is. I'm going to teach you how by using very simple shapes, you can design a perfect, this snail-like female face. Or if you just prefer and like to draw for fun.
#DISNEY FEMALE FACE SHAPES MOVIE#
Or if you're making a movie to your character design. Introduction - Welcome to the course and what to expect to learn.: Have you ever wanted to draw female faces as perfect as those of Disney princesses, faces that you can apply to your book illustrations, for example. It´s technique and practice that are at the core of great drawing skills.ġ. I´m thrilled to have this opportunity to help you discover your inner potential and become a brilliant artist. But now we are here, in the digital era, the time of endless possibilities and access to knowledge from the other side of the globe. I wish I had that knowledge when I started drawing myself.

And in this course I´m going to share this method with you, so you can, already now, start practicing and get ahead with your drawing skills. Now, that I have been working in the field of animation as a character designer amongst other things, I have discovered an easy and understandable way to approach drawing the faces of those characters. Maybe you are just like me and you´d love someday to be able to do this for a living, or even just for fun or for your kids?


It was easy to fall in love with those characters which inspired me to pursue a career in arts and animation. I don't have evidence to support these views beyond my own experiences (indeed, there are conflicting studies out there), but I know I'm not alone in thinking this.Growing up with animated Disney films, I´ve always been fascinated by their extraordinary drawing style. It would be one thing if Disney princesses existed in isolation, but they don't - they exist in a broader cultural context that tells women and girls that they need to be skinny in order to be beautiful, and that beauty is important to their life chances. Even though Disney princesses are obviously fictional and illustrations (not real actors), and even though animation is by definition somewhat unrealistic, the constant reinforcement of these depictions of women (in other mediums too - Barbie, Photoshopped magazine covers, etc.) can still have negative effects. There's an underlying message that to be desirable, to win over the prince, women have to look a certain, unattainable way. It doesn't help that most Disney women that don't fit the princess model are villains. I think it teaches girls that there's only one type of "princess," and some children easily internalize that message, like I did. Do I think it's damaging to depict women as stock bodies with exchangeable heads? Well, yeah, kind of.
