Want to know why your figure drawings look stiff and lifeless? You're probably skipping the fundamentals that separate amateur sketches from professional work. Drawing convincing human figures isn't about tracing outlines—it's about understanding the machinery underneath.
Most artists jump straight to copying photos without grasping how joints actually articulate, where weight truly settles, or why certain poses feel instantly wrong. This guide walks you through the practical knowledge working illustrators rely on daily, from skeletal landmarks that anchor every pose to the optical tricks that make foreshortened limbs believable.
Your skeleton determines everything. Before you worry about abs or biceps, nail down these landmarks: where collarbones meet at the throat's base, how shoulder joints cap the torso, the rib cage's egg-like volume, the pelvis as a separate rigid bucket, plus elbows, wrists, knees, and ankles.
These points stay visible regardless of someone's build. They prevent the amateur mistake of arms that seem glued onto the torso as an afterthought.
The classic 7.5-head-tall proportion puts the pubic bone at the figure's midpoint—not the belly button like most beginners assume. When arms dangle relaxed, elbows hit roughly where your navel sits. Fingertips reach about mid-thigh. But real people break these "rules" constantly.
Muscles shape the surface where they bulk up or stretch taut. The trapezius creates that neck-to-s...