![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0wbdQIgYcHTAgaWpoBXPMwJvTCyQHaQ2GPfTeiSuaBt7PHw4yDmtc9m8gZx0AePxhaA1mXkAZw6EP9qIqYPuX62BgxHE0o2RmjNz0YMA3C-nBOphALIIvNg8LHAW-CVeS_TMUZQI0nuPc/s400/Marecho+72+dpi.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhtCKdo10mqGZMbn3kDvU83e2CQOCapWyIdEVuLpcamXEBRI5-ZWfMy0nXVcaRYoFMIAlKG_hcMmgwB0u5nkzSLoHZGACzkBI03R-JYIpcwGRQnlFLnUOmnn1jPJ-dJaejAWbLCxnrmJvGK/s400/Marlo's+Sis.jpg)
These are just a couple of recent pics I sketched in pencil, then scanned and coloured up in Photoshop. Both of these young ladies are subjects to be drawn on the National Caricaturist Network forums. I'm not much of a digital painter, I'm afraid, but I do like to add some quick colour to my drawings with the Photoshop program. I was also trying out one of the texture brushes on the backgrounds of these two caricatures. As I am also currently teaching about diversity in face and body design for animated characters, I offer up these sketches as two examples of attractive young women with extremely different features. There is such a wealth of variety to be found when you study what real people actually look like, so there is really no excuse for sticking to the same time-worn template whenever you are trying to come up with a new character design. By taking an honest look at people, you may then observe and analyze the differences in head/face shapes, as well as the relative placement, size and shape of all the individual features.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj54fnTo8RJXlF0Fb6CXEJ5oCDJ_pISidJoL1eYaVogj10FHr3TpFOVfQqJxXKkn2oeeazixreoR46iDbuYfn3-jhIxV6UpK8D4LBtjnVSEeGl6X966PlktnvYEt9INDGhev5oJBIDlPrvw/s200/facc_05_figuredetail_010.jpg)