Draw the outline of a person. When designing clothes, it’s important to think about how your garment will look on the body. This is why most designers draw their designs onto a human form. It can be intimidating and time-consuming to have to draw a figure from scratch every time you make a new design, so many designers use a croquis.![Clothes Clothes](/uploads/1/2/5/8/125841615/383984819.png)
![Clothes Clothes](/uploads/1/2/5/8/125841615/383984819.png)
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[10] This just means a template you can use each time you sketch out a new garment. You will need to start by drawing the outline of a person in pencil. This is an intimidating prospect, but it doesn’t need to be difficult.- If you’re not too daunted, freehand it. The idea here is not to be anatomically correct, and most designers’ croquis drawings are rendered in some kind of personal style. Your design will look even more unique on a figure you drew yourself. Don’t worry about small details; think of your drawing as a 2-dimensional mannequin.
- If you don’t feel up to the task of drawing a human figure from scratch, use someone else’s work. Trace an image from a book or a magazine, or download one of the hundreds of free croquis templates you can find online.[11][12]
- Many designers use something called the 9 heads method to make sure their drawings are evenly proportioned.[13] The idea is to use a head as a unit of measure, and to draw a body that measures nine heads from the feet to the top of the neck.[14]
- Draw a straight vertical line, and divide it into 10 equal parts. This will be your guide as you draw.
- Section 1 starts just under the head, and measures the body from the top of the neck to the middle of the chest; section 2 measures from the middle of the chest to the waist; section 3 from the waist to the bottom of the hips; section 4 from the bottom of the waist to mid-thigh, section 5 from mid-thigh to knee, section 6 from knee to upper calve, section 7 from upper calve to mid-calve, section 8 from mid-calve to ankle, and section 9 measures the foot.[15]