How To Draw Bodies?

Start with a simple gesture line to capture overall pose and flow

Block in major shapes using cylinders/boxes (ribcage, pelvis, limbs)

Establish the head size relative to the body and place it on the gesture line

Sketch the ribcage and pelvis as basic forms, then connect them with a spine curve

Place the shoulder line and pelvis line to set tilt and rotation

Add simple limb volumes and align elbows/knees with the gesture

Indicate joints with light marks (shoulders, elbows, wrists, hips, knees, ankles)

Keep proportions rough at first (head-to-body ratio, shoulder width, hip width)

Ensure the torso twists and the pelvis tilts consistently with the pose

Add muscle groups as simplified planes rather than detailed anatomy immediately

Refine the chest, abdomen, and back planes using directional shading cues

Clarify the deltoids, biceps/triceps, forearm mass, and hand structure with basic forms

Build thighs, calves, and feet with blocky shapes before adding definition

Use overlapping forms to show depth and limb placement

Check symmetry and balance by comparing left/right silhouettes

Correct perspective by aligning limb angles and torso tilt to the same viewing direction

Add clothing/armor/constraints by wrapping forms around the underlying body

Clean up the silhouette last, keeping lines confident and minimal

Use light construction lines for adjustments, then redraw final lines

Re-check proportions and joint placement after every major refinement pass

Practice drawing from multiple angles (front, side, 3/4) and multiple heights (standing, sitting)

Use reference for anatomy and proportions, then simplify to your construction steps

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