How to Draw a Realistic Dog Step by Step Using a Pencil. To create a realistic picture, you should find an appropriate nature. At first, try to create sketches using pictures or photos, and then you will be able to depict your pet.
Okay, who *doesn't* love a good doggo? Sharpen your pencils and learn how to capture the cuteness with a little bit of practice. Though this tutorial walks you through how to draw a beagle, the same method applies to any and all breeds.
Draw a Dog
- How to draw a realistic dog using charcoal in this how to draw tutorial. How to draw fur and how to use a brush with charcoal - Video tutorial.
- There are 30396 custom dog drawing for sale on Etsy, and they cost $34.97 on average. The most common custom dog drawing material is paper. The most popular color?
Level: Easy
What You Need
Instructions
1. Block In Your Shapes
Start your dog as all drawings begin: a block-in of the basic shapes. Use circles and ovals to create the different forms found in your pup's face, and draw very faint horizontal and vertical guidelines to help you align the eyes, snout, etc.
Work to refine your block-in until you have a basic contour.
2. Lightly Shade
Once you have a clean contour line, clean up the sketch by erasing your guidelines. Begin shading the fur and features. For the blackest parts of the dog, like the eyes and little black nose, use a dark 6B pencil.
3. Define the Texture
This step totally depends on your dog's breed and type of fur — our beagle's short, straight coat is much different than, say, a poodle's curls. But no matter which type of fur you're drawing, you want to shade with directional strokes using a 2B pencil. Don't get caught up trying to draw individual hairs.
As you work, build up the tone and details of the fur by increasing your pressure to define darker sections in your drawing. For even darker effects, switch to a 4B pencil.
4. Use an Eraser
Instructions
1. Block In Your Shapes
Start your dog as all drawings begin: a block-in of the basic shapes. Use circles and ovals to create the different forms found in your pup's face, and draw very faint horizontal and vertical guidelines to help you align the eyes, snout, etc.
Work to refine your block-in until you have a basic contour.
2. Lightly Shade
Once you have a clean contour line, clean up the sketch by erasing your guidelines. Begin shading the fur and features. For the blackest parts of the dog, like the eyes and little black nose, use a dark 6B pencil.
3. Define the Texture
This step totally depends on your dog's breed and type of fur — our beagle's short, straight coat is much different than, say, a poodle's curls. But no matter which type of fur you're drawing, you want to shade with directional strokes using a 2B pencil. Don't get caught up trying to draw individual hairs.
As you work, build up the tone and details of the fur by increasing your pressure to define darker sections in your drawing. For even darker effects, switch to a 4B pencil.
4. Use an Eraser
Realistic Dog Drawing Tutorial
Mold a kneaded eraser into a thin point with flat edges and gently stroke it over the shaded areas of fur. This picks up a little bit of the graphite from smaller sections and makes the fur even more lifelike.
5. Add the Final Details
Realistic Dog Drawings Easy
Keep working on the fur using your different pencils until you're happy with how your pupper looks on paper!