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I feel like hair is one of the most difficult things for people to draw. A lot of us approach
it in the wrong way. We just jump in a start scratching away.. Drawing hair takes patience.
There’s a lot of little shapes, lines, highlights, and its easy to get impatient and sloppy.
But we really need to slow down and approach it one step at a time. And when you get to
the details, you need to focus on designing, not just copying as you see it.
The approach to drawing hair should be the same as sculpting hair. You don’t sculpt
hair with individual strands... You find the volumes of the groups. Think of the hair as
a 3 dimensional form, just like, the nose.. and lips.. It has mass. And it has all the
same elements of light, although slightly hidden by the texture and all the strands.
Ignoring the form and going straight for the texture results in spaghetti hair..it just
looks like a bunch of lines coming off the head [make a wig out of spaghetti? If can’t
then just drop spaghetti on my head..]
VOLUME
So, the first volume we need to think about actually isn’t even the volume of the hair.
It’s the volume of the head. Or, whatever it is that the hair is on. If you’re drawing
a Dog, you gotta think about the rib cage or the legs..
The groups of hair wrap around the form underneath and inherit the same light patterns. In this
example, I made sure to shade the large group of hair to resemble the rounded form under
it, before I added all the texture on top. The left side of the hair mass is all shadow,
then it transitions and has a bunch of halftone shapes, and then all the highlights are on
the right.
Now we get to the part where we draw the locks of hair. And everybody’s hair type is different.
If it’s straight, you’re just gonna get a cylinder. If it’s curly, you’re gonna
have a lot of little locks, and that design problem becomes a bit more difficult. But
whatever the hair type, figure out what those shapes are and design them as volumes, not
strands. So, for example here’s a lock of hair. It’s like a ribbon with some thickness
to it. This ribbon has shadow, halftone, and a highlight.
It doesn’t look like hair, but it does look 3-dimensional. To make it look like hair we
need to add a 4th element - Texture.
This includes the separations between the smaller groups of hair, a few lines representing
strands, and breaking up the contours. There will be stray strands that soften and break
up the edge between hair and background. Make sure to add variation along the edges to make
it more interesting and believable. The connection to the skin shouldn't be outlined. Show some
gradations, otherwise it will look like a wig or clip-on beard. [show graphite drawing
of homeless man]
When adding the texture part, its all about the design. Don’t get too repetitive with
the strokes. Try to create organic and interesting shapes with the overlaps and groupings. There
needs to be a good balance of simple areas and complex areas with a lot of detail. Get
the illusion of the strands. Don’t try to draw every single strand.
Have confidence with every stroke. It’s better to draw a quick confident strand slightly
out of place, then a wobbly ugly stroke in the right place. Don’t be timid. This happens
when drawing strands that drop down the forehead. People don’t want to mess up the face. But,
it doesn’t matter if it’s in the perfect spot… Hair moves.
Usually you want to start the stroke at the root and let it taper towards the tip. But
if you have good control of the pencil, you can taper correctly from either side. [show
pencil strokes that look like hair]. make sure you’re holding the pencil like a brush
and use the length of the charcoal to get thin lines, and the side to get soft thick
lines. Transitioning from one to the other gets you a nice taper.
Designing Shadows
I like to approach shadows as flat graphic shapes. It’s important to get an attractive,
well balanced separation of light and dark before beginning to render/shade. Try to find
ways to connect as many shadow shapes as you can. Even with curly hair, where you have
a lot of little shapes, it’s important to connect them. Otherwise you’ll have too
many floating shapes which can be distracting. This goes back to good design. Inside the
shadows, keep the texture and contrast to a minimum. You want the focus to stay in the
lit areas of the hair.
Designing Halftones
The areas that will have the most visible texture is the halftones. These areas get
a little bit of light from the highlight side and some darks from the shadow side creating
the most contrast and detail in these areas. Don’t forget that halftones are mostly gradations.
They gradate towards shadow on one side and towards highlights on the other.
Designing Highlights
Highlight areas should still appear light after the texture is added. That means strand
texture should be thinner, lighter, and sometimes remove texture all together. Have the highlights
glow. Try to connect them as much as possible only leaving a few lonely highlights. And
try not to make each highlight the same. Give them variety in length, thickness, edge, and
value.
So, let’s take a quick look at how I broke down this drawing into steps.
As always, I started with the linear layin getting the major shapes and rhythms.
Then I separated the lights from the shadows focusing on the design of the graphic shapes.
In this step I added dark accents inside the shadows to separate the reflected lights from
occlusion shadows. And in the lights, I added gradations from halftone to highlight. At
this point, the drawing should look 3-dimensional, since we’ve added all the basic elements
of light on form.
In the final step, I added the texture of the strands. The strokes should follow the
rhythm of the locks we defined in the previous steps. Notice that drawing the strands is
the last step, Not the first.