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Published: 2008-12-08 00:31:20 +0000 UTC; Views: 340497; Favourites: 11568; Downloads: 5361
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In my opinion, these are the most important factors in any character design: color, concept, shape, simplicity, cohesiveness, repeatability, personality and uniqueness.Color: Any design with colors all over the place creates too many places for the eye to look. Keep your color design very simple and zen. Looking at the colors shouldn't be jarring or confusing. This isn't to say only use one color, not at all, but try to make sure the ones you use are harmonious. Avoid mixing and matching different saturations of the same color or picking colors that clash with one another.
My rule of thumb: Stick to no more than three base colors and some value variations.
Concept: Your design should have inspiration, even if the inspiration is just your intended character's personality or an interesting object that represents them. Your character could be a bookworm, and that would impact her posture, her clothing, her hairstyle...pretty much everything about her! You can design clothing based on objects, elements, existing fashions or other things that relate to your character's personality.
My rule of thumb: Your whole design should radiate with one strong idea.
Shape: Every character should have a unique overall shape. Nothing is more boring than a lineup of characters with the same exact body type, height, stance, etc. There's so much that can be conveyed by body shape and posture, and it's really worth looking at pictures of people to learn to draw as many different types as possible.
My rule of thumb: You should be able to recognize your character as a silhouette only.
Simplicity: Even in designs with lot of detail, I think the best character and clothing designs need to be relatively simple in the breakdown. Posture and pose can usually be conveyed in a few lines, and clothing shouldn't have too many elements or pieces to avoid confusing the eye.
My rule of thumb: You should be able to convey your character's overall design in ten pen strokes or less.
Cohesiveness: This goes for every facet of the design (concept, color, shape, etc.) Try to repeat colors, shapes, designs, patterns and overall ideas across your figure. Even if it's something really small, like your character has bright blue eyes, try to repeat a variation of that blue somewhere on the figure - maybe even an accessory or a fringe. Try to use every color and shape more than once.
My rule of thumb: The bottom half of your design should look like it belongs to the top half.
Repeatability: When you design a character, make sure that drawing him/her over and over would not get tedious, or that it would even be possible. Draw him/her from several different angles. Don't include any laboriously detailed patterns or tattoos that would be impossible to draw the same way twice.
My rule of thumb: Drawing your character should be relatively easy.
Personality: Your character's face, stance, clothing choices, even their color scheme should reflect their personality. If you can't hint at their personality through one aspect, double your efforts on the others; for example, if you have to draw a depressed man as a brightly colored clown, make him really slouched, his expression REALLY sour, etc.
My rule of thumb: We should know your character the moment we look at him.
Uniqueness: Perhaps most important of all, your character should be unique in body type, face shape, facial features, posture, deformities, etc. Don't just use one design or shape for everything, even if you really, really like the way one particular thing looks. Hairstyle, accessories and clothing don't count for this category because those things can be changed; don't depend on them to differentiate your character from another! Your character is an individual, so do them a favor and make them look like one.
Things to vary on the face include jawline, eyebrows, eye shape and size, nose shape and size, cheekbone placement, lip and mouth shape, ear size and shape, overall placement of the features, hairline, forehead size, and unique features such as scars, piercings and tattoos.
Things to vary on the body include height, weight, posture, skin tone, shoulder width, muscle tone, butt size, arm/leg length and shape, missing limbs, breast size, shape and placement, neck length and torso-to-leg ratio.
For a good example of this, look at the show Avatar; it has characters that periodically change clothes and hair, or are dressed in practically identical clothes, yet you can still recognize them all as individuals.
My rule of thumb: You should still be able to recognize your character even if they were bald and naked.
Related content
Comments: 917
ARACELICASANDRA [2013-07-23 18:05:51 +0000 UTC]
Translation for spanish, please I really want desing my own characters because I want do my serie please. Google traductor is a horrible sh**
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Helenanimator In reply to ARACELICASANDRA [2013-08-07 16:56:17 +0000 UTC]
Mi español no es el mejor, pero voy a tratar de ayudarle.
- tener inspiración para tu personaje
- evitar los colores que chocan
- ir para un diseño de cuerpo único
- trate de repetir colores, formas, diseños, patrones e ideas generales
- asegúrese de que puede llamar su personaje desde diferentes ángulos
- dibujar su personaje debería ser relativamente fácil
- asegúrese de que su personaje es reconocible (sombras, siluetas, ...)
Espero que me ayudó
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ARACELICASANDRA In reply to Helenanimator [2013-08-08 16:36:56 +0000 UTC]
Well, this could help me Thanks you for answer my question
Of course I want to make a lot of characters ^^
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mcp100 [2013-07-21 03:33:32 +0000 UTC]
This will help a lot, I have a full cast of characters for an original story i'm working on & my goal is to make each character as unique as possible. Incredible tips!
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WereWeasel42 [2013-07-21 01:24:42 +0000 UTC]
Thanks for this! I really like how it's written in kind of a checklist format so I can go through and see the revisions I can make.
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KiraYamato74 [2013-07-17 01:09:46 +0000 UTC]
This is a fantastic guide that will help me better design my own characters. Instant favorite for present and future reference!
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KrispyNumber [2013-05-22 15:40:55 +0000 UTC]
This is a wonderful resource. Thank you very much for making it. I'll be referencing it constantly <3
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Crysenley [2013-05-19 19:08:43 +0000 UTC]
I think I may have read this before, but for some reason I didn't fav it...
I really like this guide, it gave me some other things to consider when designing my characters.
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TheSkaldofNvrwinter [2013-04-29 02:25:02 +0000 UTC]
your mention of silhouettes made me think of The Simpsons
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Little-Soprano [2013-04-22 21:57:14 +0000 UTC]
May I reference this in one of my "drawing" classes? It's the first guide I've ever agreed with completely. Hahah.
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A-u-t-o In reply to ??? [2013-04-08 01:54:11 +0000 UTC]
Wowee, thank you so /SO/ much for taking the time to type this concise and helpful tutorial. This will certaintly help me and other aspiring character designers.
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OnceUponANight23 In reply to ??? [2013-04-03 02:08:15 +0000 UTC]
This is brilliant, thanks a lot!
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ImaginationSlave In reply to ??? [2013-03-04 16:39:26 +0000 UTC]
Very great tips. I look forward to using it for my character creations!
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DoRKyLauRa [2013-02-07 21:33:57 +0000 UTC]
If the last rule of thumb is true, there are a LOT of Japanese anime characters that are no good. lol For the record, I completely agree! Very helpful info!
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BluuCrayon [2013-02-05 01:31:34 +0000 UTC]
This is extremely helpful. I like the Avatar reference, it is very true!
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SigmaSkylord [2013-01-23 03:33:29 +0000 UTC]
Ive been doing things wrong. Stupid how to draw books!
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KidSapiens [2012-08-05 00:39:51 +0000 UTC]
Dang. My main character actually breaks several of these rules.
Mainly the "recognize as a silhouette/ recognize if bald+naked ones."
Although, is it bad if that was intentional on my part?
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Joyfulcatster [2012-06-26 01:27:40 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much for these tips an I agree they need a general art tutorial gallery.
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iLubCookies [2012-06-24 06:26:42 +0000 UTC]
Wow. You're a genius!!! XD
I was having a so much trouble designing an OC for my story before I read this. Thank you!
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TeamCullen1600 [2012-05-25 21:48:28 +0000 UTC]
"You should be able to recognize your character as a silhouette only."
But...two of my OCs are identical twins...-.-'
Lol, JK xD love this.
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stickfigureparadise In reply to TeamCullen1600 [2012-06-04 00:23:02 +0000 UTC]
If they have different personalities, they'd probably use different posture/gestures at least. (sorry for butting in)
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TeamCullen1600 In reply to stickfigureparadise [2012-06-04 18:59:12 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, I know, I was kidding xD
You could tell them apart from a silhoutte, one has an ahoge and the posture is completely different, but thanks for your input
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stickfigureparadise In reply to TeamCullen1600 [2012-06-04 20:47:54 +0000 UTC]
Haha, okay. XD It's sometimes hard to tell legitimate questions from jokes. That's what I get for butting in. XD
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TeamCullen1600 In reply to stickfigureparadise [2012-06-05 10:42:39 +0000 UTC]
Yeah I know, you're not the first and definetly won't be the last xD ~h
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stickfigureparadise In reply to TeamCullen1600 [2012-06-05 17:30:29 +0000 UTC]
But, maybe someone else will see the comment and have their question answered? Never know. XD
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Normality27 In reply to stickfigureparadise [2012-09-12 00:21:03 +0000 UTC]
why do you two keep on putting "xD" emoticons in your comments?? Everyone uses that face now...EVERYONE...
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stickfigureparadise In reply to Normality27 [2012-09-12 01:21:58 +0000 UTC]
Three reasons off the top of my head:
1. I've been using 'XD' since I first started chatting eight years ago and it's a hard habit to break, -especially when I'm not trying to break it. *shrug* It's also been a popular one to use for as long as I can remember.
2. It's hard to tell the intent behind an online message as you can't hear the tone of the other person's voice or see their face. I use smiling icons to let people know that I mean something as a joke/no hard feelings/sarcasm, etc, and I prefer 'XD' over the other smiles I could use. -especially when I see something as funny. 'Lol' gets boring after a while.
3. I'm not a hipster so I don't care if everyone else is doing it. B)
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CaliforniaClipper In reply to stickfigureparadise [2012-09-18 15:05:35 +0000 UTC]
Flagged as Spam
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stickfigureparadise In reply to CaliforniaClipper [2012-09-19 01:33:30 +0000 UTC]
Haha, glad I'm not the only one!
Gosh, my intrusion sure is popular!
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noodledude In reply to ??? [2012-05-06 20:49:20 +0000 UTC]
These are some very helpful tips for character design that definitely will help me.
Thanks!
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wentinghappy [2012-04-16 04:16:50 +0000 UTC]
This makes great sense! I wrote down all your rule of thumb.
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