Beginner´s Guide; Importance of Proper Body Proportions and How to Get Them Right

Scriba Stylus
4 min readNov 1, 2016

One of the most important factors of human figure drawing, sketching and painting is proportions. Have you ever seen a child’s drawing of a person? Typically what makes it look most childish isn’t the lack of detail or proper shading, but the fact that the legs may be shorter than the arms, or the hands eyes may be larger than the feet.

All bodies are different and no one body is perfect or ideal. Do not confuse proper body proportions with perfect body proportions. Read on to understand why proper body proportions in human figure drawings are important and the best ways to make sure they are always accurate in your own art.

The Importance

Even if you aren’t the greatest artist in the world, if the proportions on your figure drawing are accurate, the realism and integrity of the figure is preserved. We see bodies all the time and the eye knows instinctively when the proportions are out of whack. “Everything that is drawn realistically is drawing with the laws of perspective, even if the artist doesn’t realise that he or she is using them.”1

The human body is one of the most complex shapes on the planet. Proportions are the first thing to learn when drawing bodies because they teach you how to be anatomically correct. This can be accomplished by charting out the body and identifying which joints match up to the others.

The Techniques

Artists have been studying the human form for centuries. They have realised that there are a set of guidelines and perspective drawing techniques that vary when you change the subjects’ gender, age or even sometimes ethnic background. Let’s get started with the basics.

1. If a figure is proportioned properly, it is defined by something called “the alignment of the joints”, which is the same no matter what. You can start to create this by drawing a head at the top of your paper, and then drawing seven sections of equal height to the head below.

2. The bottom of the pelvis rests on the fourth line, the bottom of the knees rest on the bottom of the sixth line and a vertical line can represent each leg, from lines four to eight.

3. The area for the ribcage and lungs starts halfway between points 1 and 2. It technically extends down to mark 3, but from around 2.5 to 3 can vary depending on the look of the subjects stomach. Remember that the nipples land on mark 2 and the bellybutton lands around 3.5.

4. Shoulders sit around 1.5 and the bottom of the elbow should be level with bellybutton. The hip joints should be level with the wrists. Fingertips should not pass mid-thigh.

It is recommended to practice drawing this form consistently and in different poses and positions.

Remember also that men and women differ slightly in their proportions. As a rule of thumb, mens’ body width should be 2 ⅓ heads, the distance between nipples on the chest is 1 head, the width of the calf muscles at the lower arc is 1 head, and the bottom of the knees is 2 heads from the ground.

Women’s body width is a little smaller: 2 heads wide. Their waists are 1 head wide, buttocks are 1 ½ heads wide, width of the calf muscles at mid point is one head wide and the bottom of the knees should be 2 heads from ground level.

If you practice, over time the proper body proportions will become second nature to you and even if the subject is posed, you will be able to see immediately how long and far apart the limbs should be from the body, etc. and you figure drawing will improve greatly.

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