How To Draw Cuts & Bruises | EHow

Share
  1. Get Crafty
  2. Art Projects
How to Draw Cuts & Bruises By Carl Hose eHow may earn compensation through affiliate links in this story. Learn more about our affiliate and product review process here.

Drawing cuts and bruises isn't difficult to do, but making them look realistic can be challenging. By using a combination of texturing and coloring techniques, you can create cuts and bruises in your drawings that will have a realistic appearance and lend a touch of professional realism to your work.

Advertisement

Step 1

Draw a small line on the area of your drawing where you want to place a cut. The length of the line depends upon how long you want the cut to be. The line should not be perfectly straight. A cut will have a slightly ragged appearance.

Video of the Day

Step 2

Draw a line parallel to the first, making the line as ragged as the first line you drew. The lines should be as far apart as you want the cut to be wide. Connect the two lines at each end. This is the cut. To give the cut a deeper appearance, add a few pencil strokes in between the lines to give the impression it has severed through a layer of skin. Add shading around the inner edges to help enhance the depth of the cut.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Get Crafty How to Make a Life Size Puppet Get Crafty How to Make Styrofoam Skulls Get Crafty How to Decoupage a Poster to a Canvas

Step 3

Draw a circle where you want the bruise to appear. The circle should be uneven to give it the appearance that it is spreading. Add a little pencil shading to the circle and smudge it with your finger to smooth out the hard lines of the shading.

Step 4

Add color to the cuts and bruises. The coloring phase will bring the wounds to life. You can use color pencils or markers. Add a dark red to the cut, then blend in some black to make it look more realistic. Color the bruise with a combination of black, yellow and purple. Begin by adding purple and black to the center of the bruise, then add some yellow around the edge of this. Blend the colors until they appear to run into one another to recreate the discoloration of the skin when it's bruised.

Video of the Day

Advertisement

eHow may earn compensation through affiliate links in this story. Learn more about our affiliate and product review process here.

you may like

1
How to Make Cardboard Chairs Without Glue
2
How to Make a Greek Helmet in a Half Hour With Cardboard
3
How to Make a 3D Wolf Model

You May Also Like

1
How to Use Scroll Saw Patterns
2
How to Make a Paper Envelope
3
Drawing Tools for Enlarging

Tag » How To Draw A Cut