As the hexers have worked out over the years, the Catz in our favorite Petz games are all based on circles grouped and lined up in such a way to make a cute kitty. The building block to being able to draw a portrait is to be able to draw circles.
You can use stencils, templates, or a compass, if you want, to draw the circles. If you want to freehand the circles like I do in this tutorial this video by Emmy Kalia: How to Draw a Circle Freehand - Beginner Drawing Techniques
Step 1:
Draw a large-ish Circle. I recommend no smaller than 1 1/2 inches across to start, it's better to start a bit bigger.
Step 2:
Lightly draw a line across the circle splitting it in roughly half.
Step 3:
Lightly draw a line splitting the circle in roughly half vertically.
Please Note: Steps 2 and 3 are reversible. Do them in the order that feels more comfortable to you. The point is to have your circle roughly looking like a pie cut into 4 even pieces at this point.
Step 4:
Where cross in the center of the circle where the two lines meet is where the center of your nose should set. I'm drawing a Calico for this tutorial, so let's draw a heart!
Step 5:
It's easier to place the eyes, if the muzzle is done. So lets do that first!
The important bit on this step is that the two circles must touch the nose, and just under the nose they need to touch each other.
The lower jaw nestles in the triangle created by the muzzle circles.
Step 6:
The eyes do not touch in the center in the front view on a Calico! (Mind the gap, or lack their of, in the other breeds of Catz.) However the eyes must touch the top of the muzzle. I found the spacing part tricky, so expect a few tries to get it.
Step 7:
The Irises of the eyes need to be in roughly the same spot on both eyes, or your catz will look cross eyed. I find it easier to draw the colored part first then the dark pupil. Someone else may find it easier to do it the other way round and draw the pupil first, then the colored Iris around it.
Step 8:
Part of the beauty starting with drawing a calico? The eye lids don't have to match! Draw the line where you want the eyelid. Don't be afraid to cross your iris to get the expression that you want. Be sure to erase the iris and pupil where they're under the eye lid.
Step 9:
On calico's the cheeks aren't that visible, but they're there. The reason for drawing everything so far first is so that you can line up the cheeks.
The cheeks line up behind the muzzle, under the eyes, and behind the jaw. A Calico's do not stick that far out of the side of the head, unlike say a Scottish fold's. It's best to draw them in anyway, as a lot of the calico's face patches line up with the edges of these circles.
Step 10:
The ears are basically crooked triangles. Place dots at the following two points to start your ears.
The innermost line of both ears lines up with the center of the eyeball on a Calico (Dot 1).
The outer most line is lower, ending near the top quarter of the eye (Dot 2).
The Tippy Top of the ear is positioned above and slightly to the inside of Dot 2 (see Dot 3).
Once you have all three dots in place, draw a straight line to create the outside of the ear.
Step 11:
The inside of the ear. Draw a dot just down from top dot, inside the ear, and two just inside the bottom of the ear (be sure to not go below the curve of the head). Connect the dots, for the sides of the inside of the ear, and follow the curve of the head for the bottom of the triangle.
Step 12:
To clean up, or not to clean up... The choice is up to you.
This next step you have a bit of wiggle room as it's mostly a choice of preference. It's up to you if you want to erase the stray lines that are on your drawing, or leave them in and color over them. Just be sure that if you decide to erase the strays that you check, and make sure, the eraser hasn't dried out on another piece of paper. A dried out eraser at this stage of the game has ended in me in tears.( Then digging out the tracing paper, to try and salvage my picture.
Now that you're this far all that's left is to color your kitty how you want! Either copy one from your game, or make up colors on your own 💜 I suggest starting with a 'basic' calico, without a lot of the busier textures and work your way up.
Going into detail on how to color your kitty is beyond what I have room for in this tutorial. Perhaps a future one can cover that.
Don't forget to add your kitties whiskers during this step! I suggest if they're dark ones make them one of the last things you color in. That way if your kitty is light colored the darker whiskers won't smear as you try to color around them. (Yes... I've tried. Coloring around them doesn't work too well in real media!)
I hope you enjoyed my first art tutorial! If you have any questions, or suggestions, please drop me a line in the Contact form on the right, or you DM me on WhiskerWick, RKC, Duke's Group, or Discord (I'm stancymckatt on all of them).