Step-By-Step Watercolor Guide Gives You All The Secrets To Creating Fresh and Vibrant Watercolor Paintings
I Am Painting - Lessons and Tutorials
Watercolor Painting Lessons
Painting Portraits With Watercolor

Painting people with acrylic or watercolor paint is easy, but does take patience and practice. Although every artist is different I generally use several thinned down layers of color to obtain the correct shadows and colors. 

The first and in my opinion, the most important step is drawing the subjects features and head shape correctly. It does not matter how you master this, just get the features correct. One method is to use a grid. Place a grid over the photo then draw grid lines on the canvas and simply copy what you see onto the canvas square by square. You may even be talented enough to freehand the drawing. I will let you in on a secret, but you have to keep it to yourself. If you have the photo on your computer, just enlarge it, reverse or mirror image it, then trace with tracing paper. Now just put the tracing paper on the canvas and reproduce the exact image without knowing a thing about drawing!

Now create a skin color and block in the entire skin area. Using white, yellow, reds, and burnt sienna creates most skin color. Obviously adjust the amounts of each color depending on the actual colors and tones. The paint should be very thin like a watercolor. Use some of this color and add burnt sienna to paint in the outline of the eyes, nose and mouth. Make sure that you use a very fine, thin brush so that the lines will be thin.

Add some burnt sienna and crimson or other red to the
 skin color where you want the shadows to be. Study the
 photo or model and see where they are. Add more thin
 layers and blend them into the flesh color until the
 shadows are distinct.

Add details of the eyes, nostrils, lip color and eyebrows. 
Final details can be added by using pure white. Such
 details may be upon the eyelids, on the nose, upper lip
 or anyplace you want to look moist or where the light is
 catching it.

Painting people does take practice. Do not get disappointed
 if do it yourself portraits are not perfect. If you have a desire
 to paint people you will get it with enough practice.

Want to learn how to paint better?  

Do you know what to practice so that you improve your artistic talent sooner rather  than later.  Let experienced artist Richard Robinson show you exactly what you need to know and what you need to practice. 
 
More FREE Art Lessons  Here
Learn and Master Painting
Lesson 1 - Pine Tree Meadow

Lesson 2 -  Your Lesson Here!