Fundamentals To Mastering Stylized Portrait Painting Class Work
They began not with eyes but with a silhouette, a single confident curve that declared the tilt of a head and the slope of a shoulder. Maru sketched, erased, and sketched again until that silhouette hummed like a familiar chorus. Next came planes: cheek, temple, jaw — broad, simple blocks mapped out like hills on a map. The face needed to be readable, even when the paint was frugal.
The sitter was a baker named Lina, cheeks still warm from the oven. She inspected the painting without a word, then laughed softly, eyes wide. "That's me," she said. "But braver." They began not with eyes but with a
Lighting came last. Maru imagined a window and made the light decide the truth: a rim that carved the ear from the background, a core shadow that pushed the eye into mystery. Texture was suggested, not explained — a few rough, economical marks for hair, soft feathering for fabric. The portrait was almost finished when the bell downstairs chimed and footsteps padded up the stairs. The face needed to be readable, even when