How to draw ass
How to draw ass
Cartoon Fundamentals: How to Draw the Female Form
If you want to draw a girl or a woman in a cartoon way, it may be hard to find a tutorial that shows how to draw a female body without sexualizing it. It’s true that the cartoon style uses simplification and exaggeration to be more effective, but it doesn’t mean that you can draw the female form in only one way—even if it’s a pin-up drawing.
In this tutorial, I’ll show you how to draw a cartoon woman without same-face or same-body syndrome. You’ll learn everything about female form drawing—the proportions of a female body, various shapes of the body, and how to draw a cartoon female face step by step.
To get some inspiration, have a look at the hundreds of character designs on Envato Elements. Or for a shortcut, try a character creation kit!
1. Female Body Proportions
The main difference between a female and male body lies in the waist area. Females tend to have wider hips, for two reasons: they’re anatomically wider to make giving birth possible, and estrogen makes fat accumulate in this area. This makes the waist look thinner. Males have smaller hips and wider chest/shoulders, so the waist isn’t as noticeable.
So, to create a difference between a female and male body in cartoon style, put the focus on the waist in females and on the shoulders in males.
These are realistic proportions. As you can see, the difference is not that striking. In cartoon style, you can exaggerate it.
Body Shape Types
But it isn’t the end of it. The ratio between the shoulders, waist, and hips differs among females, creating four basic body types:
But this was just about the skeletal ratio. The fat accumulation affects the silhouette as well, and females tend to accumulate it more easily than males. In women, fat usually accumulates in the hips, buttocks, and thighs, but the skeletal proportions affect the final outcome:
Besides this, there can be other factors affecting the proportions:
Disclaimer: body types are often described in different ways in different sources. I chose to describe them in a way that is the most useful for drawing. It may not be consistent with every list of body shapes you can find on the Internet.
If you want to learn more about the human body, check out these tutorials:
How to draw ass
Most of the time, for masking, this will be enough: <\p1>m 0 0 l 100 0 100 100 0 100
You’ll use the scaling tool to stretch it and mask anything with roughly rectangular shape.
If you add border, like \bord20, you can have round edges too.
If you scale it down to 1 pixel and add border, you’ll even have a circle.
I’m sure you now understand how to make an ellipse, which you can then rotate etc.
So for most masks, you won’t need ASSDraw. But what if you do.
I’ll use a funny example from a recent episode. It’s a bit unusual way of using ASSDraw, but it will do for this guide.
After considering my options for a minute I decided that there’s no point in trying to do the impossible.
It’s either \an8 or I have to come up with some unusual idea. And I really don’t like \an8. I don’t think I’ve ever done that.
So I decided for ASSDraw.
Here’s how you use it:
It’s easy once you go through the process for the first time. The pain in the ASS for beginners is to figure out how to get the result in correct zoom and how to not have the anchor point 2000 pixels away from the actual drawing. That’s what points 2, 5 and 6 are about.
Now for the actual drawing. You could probably figure it out by yourself.
That red dot/cross is the starting point. You can either work from there, or move the point, or create a new one.
At the bottom of ASSDraw you can see «m 0 0»
That’s the starting point. If you start from there, it will also be the anchor point in Aegi.
If you want the anchor point in the centre of your drawing, move the starting point or create a new one.
Select Drag from the tools to move points. Select Move to create a new one. If you make a new one, delete the «m 0 0» from the line below.
You have a starting point, so now you want lines. Obviously you’ll choose Line from the tools and start drawing. Kinda like clipping in Aegi. Since you have ‘Pan background’ enabled, you can now zoom in [with the slider or mouse wheel] and move the screen with right click or arrows as much as you want. Just place dots with the Line tool till you have what you wanted to draw. Alternately there’s the Bezier tool, just like with clipping in Aegi. Simple enough.
A little demonstration:
You’ll end up with this.
The point of aligning the red cross and using \an7 is that you have the anchor point where you want it to be.
If you don’t do that, things will still work, but your anchor point for this little drawing can end up on any place on the screen or even outside of it, which is a bit inconvenient.
So you draw what you actually want.
2 straight lines and the rest is Bezier.
You can paste it in Aegi and see how it looks, then fix it some more and just paste the new line over again.
This is the result, in 2 layers, one with border, set colours and some transparency.
Now you just add the styled text, and you’re done.
So that’s how you typeset a sign like that.
It may still be a bit ridiculous, but if you can typeset this and make it look better than this, please show.
Also, the «welcame» is intentional, so you can stop laughing.
How to make hollow shapes?
One thing that may be hard to figure out is how to create an empty space inside a drawing.
Each of the two shapes starts with m.
The trick is that they have to be drawn in opposite directions.
If you draw them in the same direction, you’ll get this:
For illustration of what can be done with this, check this thing made by KKRais.
And another example of what I did recently:
I couldn’t find a font that I’d be satisfied with and wanted to try some drawing anyway, so I drew the whole title.
Sometimes people give me ideas.
there needs to be an optional assdraw test.
if optional, you can just make one for yourself
like «draw an elephant with ASSDraw»
there you go
actually lemme try that
In the meantime Haidaraaaaa tried a cute elephant but got something out of a nightmare instead.
You can use ASSDraw to make additions to your text, like I did with the M in Muromi here:
ASSDraw has no saving option and some bug when using Ctrl+Z that can mess things up pretty bad, so make sure to back up your drawing coordinates every now and then.
2015 Note: ASSDraw does have a saving option.
For most simple drawings, you can just use the clip tool in Aegisub and convert the clip to drawing with a script.
Learn to Draw Butts with Just Five Simple Lines
You know what I say when someone tells me they “can’t” draw?
Even those who’ve yet to discover the transformative effects of Lynda Barry’s wonderfully corrective Picture This know how to draw something. Very few children make it to adulthood without picking up some simple geometric formula by which a series of ovals, rectangles and lines can be configured to resemble a doggie head or a brave astride his cantering pony.
A couple thousand renderings later, such magic still satisfies, but you might want to consider branching out. May I recommend the teachings of artist and visual storyteller, Karl Gude? This laid-back former Director of Information Graphics at Newsweek can – and will! – teach you how to draw “great butts” with just five lines.
Gude’s command of posterior essentials is downright heady. (I say this as a former artist’s model whose rear end has been misrepresented on paper more times than I’d care to mention.) Who knew that capturing this part of human anatomy could prove so simple? Gude’s easygoing online instruction style may be traceable to some sort of adult beverage (I’m not casting stones…), but his methods are easy enough for a child to master.
Speaking of which, if you want to make a friend for life, share the above video with an actual child, preferably one who claims he or she “can’t” draw. Put a Sharpie in his or her paw, and within five minutes, Gude will have the little twerp cranking out butts of all shapes and sizes. After which, pride of accomplishment may well lead to some of Gude’s more advanced tutorials, like the detailed human eye seen below.
If that proves too challenging, there’s no shame in sticking with the glutes. To my way of thinking, the mindset that allows the artist to keep going when his pencil snaps mid-demonstration is lesson enough.
Related Content:
Ayun Halliday‘s personal motto is Dare to Be Heinie. Follow her @AyunHalliday
How to Draw BUTTS.
Learn about the anatomy of the glutes and some tips on drawing them. Make sure to Subscribe: http://bit.ly/SubProko
There are three major butt muscles you should know to draw good butts: the gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, and tensor fasciae latae. Fat also plays an important role in the appearance on the surface.
Your assignment is to give Skelly a butt! I’ve included 3 photos of Skelly posed (http://proko.com/268), or you can use the skelly app (http://proko.com/skelly) to make any pose you’d like! Think about where each muscle originates and inserts. You can keep the lower leg as a simple cylinder, or a bloated cylinder. Think about how the forms of the butt muscles are distorted by the pose.
The premium anatomy course includes drawing butt variations and more about each of the three muscles.
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Instructional How to Draw videos for artists. My drawing lessons are approachable enough for beginners and detailed enough for advanced artists. My philosophy is to teach timeless concepts in an entertaining way. I believe that when you are having fun, you learn better. I take pride in producing high quality videos that you will enjoy watching and re-watching.
How To Draw A Butt Step By Step
I want to teach you how to draw a butt step by step! And to be more specific, a woman’s rear end. Are you ready to learn how to draw a booty? Get those pencils sharpened and them drawing tablets fired up, and let us jump into this tutorial!
Tools
Like all my previous tutorials, I try to create these instructions accessible to traditional and digital artists. Your journey on how you want to learn is all up to you. However, the most affordable way to learn is with a blank sheet of paper and pencil.
If you want to follow along with me 100%, you will need an iPad and the latest copy of Procreate. You can also download my FREE Procreate brush settings at the link below. Don’t have Procreate? No worries! Any application that has layers and pressure sensitivity brushes should work fine.
Photos of Butts
Before we start this tutorial, I want us to get familiar with women’s butts. A great way to research the subject is with the internet. However, be warned not to venture too deep into this subject. Due to the nature of the subject matter, it may cause you to explore explicit websites. Fear not, because I want to share with you my Pinterest inspiration board. At the link below, you will find websafe images of women’s butts. You can also conduct your research using popular stock image sites like Shutterstock.
Warm-Up Sketches
Once you have completed your research on women’s butts, the next step is to warm up with some quick sketches. To do this, fill up a blank sheet of paper or canvas space for this exercise. I would recommend at least 15 minutes to warm up. If you feel that you aren’t ready, sketch as long as you want. Remember to keep your sketches loose and messy! They do not have to be perfect images or drawings of butts. It can be anything! Once you are all warmed up, we can now learn how to draw a woman’s butt step by step!
Step 1: Sketch Basic Torso
The first step is to draw the basic shape of a woman’s butt. And to make sure we are illustrating a female bottom, let us sketch the upper torso. A good rule of thumb when drawing a woman’s torso is to make the pelvic wider than the ribcage.
For digital artists, a helpful drawing tip is to use the color blue as your sketch color.
Step 2: Sketch In Limbs
After you complete the torso, sketch in a few limbs. Draw in partial legs, arms, and neck.
Step 3: Connect Rough Shapes
Next is to connect all your rough shapes. Also, add the shoulder blades and butt cheeks.
Step 4: Drop Layer Opacity
For digital users, drop the opacity of your sketch layer to 30%. Traditional users, make sure that your marks are faint.
Step 5: Refine Sketch
If you are using a digital application, switch your swatch color from blue to black. Next, create a second layer and place it on top of your sketch layer. On this layer, refine the details of your torso and the butt.
Traditional users—press down on your pencil to create darker marks.
Step 6: Add Shadows
The last step is to create a third layer and place it at the very top. On this layer, you can add all your shading and extra detail. Use the diagram below as a guide on where to shade.
Below is a diagram of what your layers panel should look like, only three layers in Procreate (not including the background.)
Woman’s Butt Complete
If you made it this far, congratulations, you have completed this lesson! I hope you learned something from this tutorial. Do you want to see more tutorials like this, make sure you show your support by subscribing to my newsletter. Don’t forget to follow me on Instagram @howtodrawdojo and @dreampigment
If you have any questions in regards to this tutorial, feel free to leave a comment below. Also, you can contact me directly via email. And remember to have fun when you draw!