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RDCongrats, you created your OC! You try drawing them again, but they look… nothing like your first version. Turns out, keeping a character consistent from memory isn’t so easy. Don’t stress, here’s how to fix that.
1. BLUEPRINT
Break your OC’s face into simple shapes: circles or ovals for the head, triangles or rectangles for the jaw, lines for eye spacing, and curves for the nose and mouth. This creates a repeatable blueprint so the face always feels like the same person.
2. CHECKLIST
Note what defines them: eye size, spacing, nose shape, jawline, hairstyle, scars, freckles, piercings, even posture. This becomes your go-to checklist to keep traits consistent. If you have multiple OCs, make sure each one stands out.
3. REFERENCE SHEET
Turn your original drawing into a mini reference. Add a front view, side view, and 3/4 view plus a few expressions. It doesn’t need to be perfect, just clear enough to show the main shapes and features. Plus, it’s great for your portfolio.
4. SWATCHES
Save the colors from your first drawing, including skin, hair, outfit, and accessories. Having swatches means you aren’t guessing shades each time. You can always tweak them later once you settle on a final palette.
5. PRACTICE
Use your blueprint, checklist, reference, and color palette together. Redraw your OC in different poses and angles with quick, low-pressure sketches focused on repeating the same features until it feels natural. Over time, it will click.
BONUS TIP
Give your OC distinctive, non-facial features that instantly say “it’s them.” Try a tattoo, horns, an asymmetrical hair streak, big earrings, or a quirky accessory.
REMEMBER
Your OCs deserve consistency, but they will evolve as you do. Change is natural. Experiment, grow, and break your own rules when inspiration hits. Art should feel fun and freeing! 💖
@rdiav










