{"title":"How to Draw the Female Figure: 7-Step Beginner Guide","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/crafts/how-to-draw-the-female-figure","category":{"slug":"crafts","name":"Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"Natalia Madej","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO5jE40qITPk-5xvgsVSMeA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUP-46ON6r4"},"tldr":"Learn how to draw the female figure with simple shapes - oval head, trapezoid torso and hips, circles for joints. 7 beginner steps with a graphite pencil.","totalDurationSeconds":824,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Graphite pencils (HB, 2B, 4B)","Sketchbook or drawing paper","Kneaded eraser","Pencil sharpener","Ruler (for proportion checks)"],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Block the Body with Simple Shapes","text":"Before any detail, get the bones of the pose on the page using basic geometry. Oval for the head. Trapezoid for the torso, wider on top. Circles for the shoulder, elbow, and knee joints. Lines for the arms and legs.Practice each shape on its own first, then combine them. The point of working in shapes is that you can shift the figure into any pose - standing, walking, leaning - and the proportions still hold up. Detail comes later, on top of this scaffold."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Sketch the Head and Upper-Body Trapezoid","text":"Start with an oval for the head. Run a vertical center line straight down the middle of it - that line tells you which way the head is facing on the page. A tilt to the line means a tilted head later.Below the head, draw the upper-body trapezoid. The top edge sits at the shoulders and is wider than the bottom, which sits at the waist. Add a small circle on each side of the trapezoid where the shoulder joints would be. Those circles are loose markers - they tell you where the arms can pivot from."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Refine the Torso and Add the Bust Line","text":"Go back over the upper-body trapezoid with smoother, curvier lines. The human body has very few straight lines anywhere on it, so soften every edge as you build the volume.Add a soft horizontal line under the shoulder joints for the bust placement - it sits just below where the armpit starts on a front view. Then narrow the waist where the trapezoid bottom meets the hips. The whole torso should read as a soft hourglass, not a box."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Add the Hip Trapezoid","text":"Below the waist, draw a second trapezoid - this one flipped so the wider edge is on the bottom. That bottom width is what sets the width of the hips.Want wider hips? Make the bottom of the trapezoid wider. Want a narrower silhouette? Pull it in toward a square. The shape decides the proportion, and you can change it pose to pose. Keep the top edge of this trapezoid lined up with the bottom of the torso so the two shapes flow together."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Build the Legs with Knee Circles","text":"Drop two lines down from the bottom corners of the hip trapezoid for the legs. Curve the lines slightly outward through the thigh, then back in through the calf - real legs are never perfectly straight.Halfway down each leg, mark a circle for the knee joint. That circle is the bend point. Now build the volume of the thigh above the knee and the calf below it, using curvy lines on both sides. The thigh should run a little longer than the calf, which keeps the proportions believable."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Add the Arms with Joint Circles","text":"From the shoulder circles you drew earlier, run a line down for each upper arm. Mark a circle for the elbow at the bend point, then continue the line down to the wrist for the forearm.If both arms are hanging straight, the shoulder line is horizontal. If one arm is raised or angled, tilt the shoulder line on a diagonal - the whole arm structure follows that tilt. You don't need fingers or hand detail yet. The shapes are still the scaffold; refinement comes after the full body is blocked in."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Combine Everything Into a Full-Body Pose","text":"Now put every shape together for a full-body standing pose. Head oval. Torso trapezoid. Shoulder circles. Hip trapezoid. Knee circles. Arm and leg lines. Block the whole figure first - face, hair, and clothing all come later.Once the structure is right, go over the outside silhouette with smoother darker lines, then erase the inner guides. You now have a proportional female figure that you can copy into any pose. Try a walking pose next - same shapes, just tilt the shoulder line one way and the hip line the other."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-21T15:52:31.249Z","published":"2026-05-21T15:50:47.407Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}