How to draw a man in military uniform step by step. How to draw military equipment with a pencil step by step

How to draw a military soldier in military uniform Soviet army for the holiday Great Victory May 9? It's very simple, we will help you with step-by-step tips. To make the soldier look as real as possible, we will depict him at attention and in a typical military uniform, while decorating him with colored pencils quite realistically.

To draw a drawing of a soldier in military uniform by May 9 or February 23, you will need: pencils, a sheet of paper, an eraser, and a little patriotism! Let's get started.

Stage 1. Drawing body proportions soft pencil so that they can be erased later. We visually determine the size of the head, upper and lower parts of the body of a soldier in military uniform.

Stage 3. It's time to draw the paraphernalia of the military uniform. Tarpaulin boots draw it as shown in our picture, then draw the shoulder straps and collar. Let's add some more elements. Your military man will soon look like a real one!

Stage 4. Draw heads in caps. A cap is one of the types of hats worn by the military; you can draw any hat you want.

Stage 5. Draw the facial features of a soldier in military uniform. They should turn out to be very restrained. We’ll also add some elements on the uniform, a star on the belt.

Stage 6. Add color and shadow to the drawing. We color the military boots with a black pencil. We also outline all the necessary lines of the hero. We highlight them with dark or black color.

Stage 8. Paint the soldier's uniform green. And the drawing is almost ready! Do not forget to transfer shadows to the drawings, coloring them more intensely and darkly in relation to the same parts of the drawing that are in the light.

The drawing is ready! We hope that it turned out as beautiful and natural for you as it did for us.

How to draw a Cheburashka with a pencil step by step

Well, now let's start drawing... Just five steps.

Step one

Let's start with the head. At the top of the sheet, in its center, draw a large circle. On the left and right sides of it are ears. They are also round and quite large, but smaller than the head. Let's draw the body - it's a large oval. All that remains are arms and legs.

Step two

We transform the outlined figures into body parts. Let's outline the head and then the ears. One leg of the Cheburashka is hidden behind the back. Let's draw a T-shirt and legs.

Step three

Let's outline the outline of the head to get the face. Let's show two big eyes. High above them are small rounded eyebrows. All that remains is to outline the triangular nose and small mouth. A finger reaches to the mouth.

Now let's pay attention to the ears.

Step four

Let's draw the eyes, or rather the pupils. Now let’s dress our Cheburashka in a fur coat. At the same time, pay attention to the bangs and ears.

Step five

Let's draw a small ornate design on our hero's T-shirt. Well, almost ready. All that's left to do is color it.

How to draw a squirrel with a pencil

Step one. We start as usual by drawing the position. We make a sketch of the body position of the baby squirrel. Draw a circle that will represent the stomach, then add two oval shapes and one big one on top, these are the legs and chest. And at the very top we draw another circle, but smaller, this is naturally the head.

Let's move on. Draw the paws up and add a tail. It should be fluffy. In shape it resembles the tail of a mermaid, which we drew in the previous lesson. After that, draw the squirrel’s legs.

Step three. Let's make an elongated shape for the squirrel's muzzle. It is as easy to draw as the face of a tiger. Draw the front sharp teeth on it. Add ears on the head.

Step four. Moving from sketch to drawing real forms. We draw kennels of fur around the tail and legs. On the face we draw eyes, ears and a nose like a smurf.

Step five. We continue in the same spirit with the rest of the body. Let's finish drawing the paws and toes on them. The squirrel's eyes are round, add black pupils. And draw an exposed tongue. Also make a few teeth on the upper jaw.

Step six. Now we erase the auxiliary lines with an eraser and trace the contours of the drawing.

It remains to add some background details. Let's draw a palm tree and a nut (or is it a coconut?) that the squirrel is holding in his hands. (How does he just hold it, it’s clearly bigger and heavier than him?)

And finally, I also colored the drawing with colored pencils to make it more fun. Here's how it happened:

How to draw the Barboskins with a pencil step by step






How to draw cartoons with a pencil

Step one. Let's determine the position of the head. It is quite large and wide. Moreover, you can draw a not very even oval. On the face, not in the center, but closer to the cheek, draw an axial vertical line. With a short line we outline the level of the nose. Now you need to carefully draw the mouth, starting from the vertical auxiliary line: first to the right, then to the left. The cat turns halfway in our direction, so the mouth does not seem to be symmetrical. Now let's draw the body. We try to make it look like in the picture. Let's draw two straight lines from the body down - the legs. With an uneven line we outline the bend of the tail. Let's depict two large shapeless oblong feet.

Step two. First, draw large oval eyes, and above them small rounded ears. Now let's round the edges of the cat's smile. At the already marked level we will place a round spout. Hands folded on the chest: they are not easy to show. Let's draw three thumbs, and from under them we draw the second hand. We draw two lines along one axis of the leg and get a leg. On the feet there are two curved stripes - toes.

Step three. Inside the ears, draw a line along the edge, so we get the auricle. Under the already drawn hand we will show a second peeking hand: almost round, but uneven. We will draw two lines along the second axis of the leg to depict the leg. Let's draw the feet. Let's outline the fluffy tail. Inside the large eye sockets, draw a horizontal line at the bottom, and under it a small pupil filled in with a pencil.

Step four. We finish drawing the tail: draw the top line along the axis. Garfield is striped: draw parallel stripes and make the tip of the tail darker.

Step five. Using an eraser, remove all auxiliary and center lines. The main outline of the cat can be outlined and made brighter.

How to draw a motorcycle step by step

Step one

The first thing to do is draw a horizontal center line for the wheels. This way we will immediately give directions to our drawing. Now the wheels themselves. Let's outline the horizontal axes. The visual effect is such that we see them not quite round, but slightly elongated vertically. Moreover, the wheel closest to us is larger.

At the top is the angular outline of a motorcycle.

Let's connect the grain of the ear with a horizontal line.

Step two

Let's make the wheel closest to us three-dimensional. Let's show the width of the rear wheel tires and its wide fork. On the body of the motorcycle itself we will need to make a lot of straight reference lines, which we will need later. Look carefully at the drawing and try to do the same.

Step three

We continue to draw wide wheels. Above them are wide wings. Let's show the seat and front tail.

Step four

All the details of the two-wheeled friend need to be transformed from angular to smooth and graceful. We carefully draw out the details.

Step five

Let's outline the outline of the base and make it brighter. Here, our brainchild is already visible.

Step six

There are a couple of barely noticeable inscriptions on the case. But we noticed them and will draw them. Now we need to give shadow to some of the details located in the depths. Well, you're done!

How to draw a war with a pencil step by step

Step one

First, let's outline the people in motion. Head, position of the torso, arms, legs.

Step two

Now let’s think about what will happen around our soldiers: a fence, stones, logs. Let's show their outlines.

Step three

We will dress our fighters: helmet, trousers, boots. Let's equip one of them with a bag. Let’s draw the face profile of the one closest to us. We will surround the fence with barbed wire.

Step four

Let's add details: barbs on the wire, belts on people's clothes, a spatula, etc.

Step five

Let's do the shading. The clothing has darker areas at the folds. Let's darken the areas on the pillars. Well, here are the soldiers against the backdrop of a military and completely unpicturesque landscape.

Let's try draw Harley Quinn.

Step one.

Draw a circle in the center of the sheet. This will be the head of Harley. On both sides of it we will draw a sketch of a harlequin’s clothing.

Step two.

We draw eyes and folds on clothes.

Step three.

Then we will draw a small neck, 3 lines from it, and on them in a circle behind them you can see the shoulder, and below them the girl’s chest. The center line is where the hand is. Next we draw a graceful posture.

Step four.

One of the most exciting pages in the history of the Great Patriotic War was and remains the topic of wartime childhood. Children and teenagers worked on an equal basis with adults at enterprises and on collective farms, volunteered for the front and became children of regiments, donated their savings to the USSR Defense Fund 1 and joined partisan detachments. And on the pages of newspapers, children tried to keep up with adults: for example, to the editorial office of the newspaper "Pionerskaya Pravda", as well as a number of other publications for children and youth that continued their work during the war years, children sent drawings, poems about the war and even caricatures in German soldier. Among the letters and drawings there are both childishly naive ones (see document No. 2) and letters from schoolchildren who tried to write and draw “like an adult.” In particular, the guys mastered caricatures of the enemy - a satirical genre, primarily characteristic of “adult” Soviet newspapers.

One of the most popular newspapers among schoolchildren was "Pionerskaya Pravda" - the printed organ of the Central and Moscow Komsomol Committees. With the beginning of the Great Patriotic War The structure of the newspaper was rebuilt taking into account wartime. Since June 1941, several special wartime columns appeared on the pages of “Pionerskaya Pravda”: “From the Soviet Information Bureau”, “Pionerskaya Piggy Bank of Scrap Metal”, etc. The satirical column “On the Bayonet” published stories, feuilletons, poems, caricatures of newspaper workers And famous writers both poets and readers. We publish several children's cartoons and letters to them below.

Drawings - children's weapons

Schoolchildren, to the best of their ability, tried to participate in the activities of the pioneer newspaper. Among the drawings you can find both not very skillful and quite professional ones. One of the basic principles has passed from the “adult” genre of caricatures to children’s caricatures, which also vary in execution technique – the depiction of an enemy with animalistic features, more like an animal than a person. Soviet soldiers and nurses in children's drawings were examples of heroism and selfless service to the Motherland.

In addition, schoolchildren responded vividly to stories about the exploits of Komsomol war heroes. Thus, the drawing by V. Arkhipovsky “The Death of “Tanya”” obviously depicts the execution of Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya, who was captured by the Germans while performing a combat mission in the village of Petrishchevo. During interrogation, she introduced herself as Tanya, and for the first time they learned about her feat from the article “Tanya” by Pyotr Lidov, published in the newspaper Pravda on January 27, 1942.

The children's cartoons and drawings about the war published below are part of a set of documents collected in wartime for exhibiting at the exhibition "Komsomol in the Patriotic War" at the State historical museum(GIM).

Exhibitions about heroism

At a meeting of the Secretariat of the Komsomol Central Committee on May 2, 1942, an official decision was made to organize an exhibition 2 that would highlight the heroism of Komsomol members and youth in the fight against the enemy at the front and in the rear. Initially, the opening of the exhibition was scheduled for the anniversary of the start of the Great Patriotic War - June 22, 1942. In reality, the first exhibition was launched in 1943 at the State Historical Museum. About 40 artists and sculptors took part in the design of the exhibition. In 1944, the Central Committee of the Komsomol decided that the exhibition should display materials not only about the Komsomol, but also about Soviet youth in general; in connection with this, the exhibition became known as “Komsomol and Youth in the Patriotic War.”

In January 1949, the exhibition “Komsomol and Youth in the Patriotic War” was included in the exhibition prepared for the 30th anniversary of the Komsomol (November 1948). In September 1949, this exhibition was named "Lenin-Stalin Komsomol". In July 1953, the exhibition was closed. Material exhibits of the exhibition were mainly transferred to Moscow museums - Historical, Revolution, and Soviet Army. Documents and some material relics were transferred to the archives of the Komsomol Central Committee. Later, the archive and museum collection of the Komsomol Central Committee was replenished with materials received from participants in the events and their relatives. Currently, the complex of exhibition documents is compiled by the M-7 fund "Documents of the exhibition of the Central Committee of the Komsomol "Lenin-Stalin Komsomol" (1942-1953)" RGASPI. Some materials from the exhibition are also included in fund N M-14 "Museum materials on the history of the youth movement in the USSR and Russia."

Published documents are stored in the M-7 fund of the RGASPI and are reproduced while maintaining spelling, punctuation and stylistic features texts.

Prepared the publication chief specialist department of scientific and information work and scientific reference apparatus RGASPI Natalia Volkhonskaya.

Document No. 1.

Letter and cartoons by Oleg Tikhonov sent to the editorial office of the newspaper "Pionerskaya Pravda"

Dear editors!

I am sending you two of my cartoons and asking you to write what is wrong with them (in the text). I live next to S. Sofronov, who sent you the cartoons. He is my friend. I lived in Moscow before and was at your editorial office of Pionerskaya Pravda, I don’t remember what year, but I only remember that I was there when the play “Gorky’s Childhood” was read. There were guys from the class in which I studied, namely: Yulia Rogova, Lenya Novobytov, Galya Osokina and me.

I would love to stay in Moscow, but circumstances were such that I had to go with my dad to Kirov, where I am now.

I am 16 years old, I live on Karl Marx Street, house 8, apt. 9. Oleg Tikhonov. I'll send you another cartoon soon.

Greetings - Oleg.

RGASPI. F. M-7. Op. 1. D. 3545. L. 1-3.

Document No. 2.

A letter from Valya Razbezhkina for an artilleryman with congratulations on the 25th anniversary of the Red Army, sent to the editorial office of the newspaper "Pionerskaya Pravda"

[February 1943]

Dear fighter!

I congratulate you on the 25th anniversary of the Red Army and wish you to quickly defeat these bastards and so that no ashes remain of them. I wish you to shoot down more fascist planes and, with the fire of your cannons, destroy all the tanks that are moving towards us in our beloved homeland. Slam and slam the German invaders. I am a student of Energy School No. 9. I ask you to quickly defeat the enemy and come to our school. I shake your hand firmly and wish you a quick victory. From Razbezhkina Valya.

Dear fighter

Congratulations on the 25th anniversary of the Red Army. To the best artilleryman of your unit, I ask you to accept my modest gift.

Ufa st. Volodarsky N 2

RUE N 9 1 [uch] 30 groups

Razbezhkina Valya.

RGASPI. F. M-7. Op. 1. D. 3545. L. 7-7v.

1. "Defense Fund" - a special fund that received voluntary donations from citizens and organizations of the USSR for the needs of the front during the Great Patriotic War. Materials on donations from Soviet and foreign citizens and institutions to the USSR Defense Fund (1942-1946) are stored in RGASPI (F. 628).
2. RGASPI. F. M-1. Op. 18. D. 1558. Personal file of Isaac-Alexander Moiseevich Yezersky. L. 14.
3. MJD - International Youth Day - an international youth holiday (1915-1945). Established by the decision of the Berne International Socialist Youth Conference in 1915 in order to mobilize youth to fight for peace. In 1916-1931 was celebrated on the first Sunday in September, and since 1932 - on September 1.

In general, drawing a person is not an easy task. We have already tried to depict a person’s eyes, face, body, and smile on a piece of paper. You can even remember these lessons before starting. Because today the task has become more difficult. Not only do you need to determine the proportions of the body, you will need to think through the details: pose, objects in hands, clothes, facial expression. That is, everything that will help us show a brave, armed, but at the same time drawn soldier. And in general, defending the Motherland is not an easy task. So, we thought for a second, remembered the films, and maybe someone we knew who wears a military uniform. Now let's get started.

Step one. Our entire drawing depends on it. Draw with a thin line, carefully and accurately. Oval head, with cross-shaped center lines. The vertical line of the neck, wide shoulders, turning into a large body, consisting of two large parts. Confident foot stance. For now we are only sketching out the two arms bent at the elbows in large details. In this picture, our soldier seems to be holding a stick in his hands. In the future, it should turn into a worthy weapon.

Step two. We will add a chin to the oval face; its shape will give character to the person. A rectangular one will make him more masculine, a triangular one will make him more assertive, and an oval one will make him soft and kind. Let's draw the eyebrow part of the headdress. From eye level down we will show the ears.

Step three. At the intended level we draw the eyes, along the vertical line - but also the mouth. And then the details: a sharp collar, rectangular shoulder straps, a hat.

Step four. We'll show you the details firearms. Let's finish drawing the hand.

Step five. We draw in detail the second hand, a military jacket, a bag, buttons and pockets on it.

Step six. A few more details on the machine and large pockets on the leg. By the way, you can determine the number and location of pockets yourself or look at the photos to find out how to draw a soldier present.

Step seven. There are a few left - these are boots

Step eight. Erase the center lines on the face. Let's highlight and circle large details. Well, our drawn soldier is ready for battle. And the machine gun in his hands is almost like a real one. I'm sure you will now know how to draw a soldier with a pencil and everything will work out for you. Good luck!

Drawing a soldier with a pencil will be quite difficult, like any person. After all, you need to know the proportions and place the legs and other parts of the body exactly. Therefore, we offer you this lesson, which clearly and clearly shows.

Required materials:

  • colored pencils in brown, black, orange and pink tones;
  • simple pencil;
  • black marker;
  • eraser;
  • ruler;
  • sheet of paper.

Drawing steps:

1. First, using a ruler, draw a vertical line, and then divide it into nine equal parts. The soldier will consist of these parts.


2. The head will occupy the first segment, let’s designate it schematically. Draw the hair, ears and headdress, which will extend slightly beyond the upper border.

From the bottom of the head draw the neck. Towards it we draw the broad shoulders of the soldier in the second segment. We draw from the edges of the shoulders along one more line down to the fourth segment. This will be the waist, on which the belt will be depicted. From this point we draw straight lines to the fifth segment. Secure with a horizontal line.


3. From the shoulders we draw down segments to the beginning of the fourth gap. We put small points and draw straight lines until the beginning of the fifth interval. At the end of each line we will draw small ovals. These will be the soldier's hands.


4. Now let's move on to the legs and draw them as straight lines. We finish drawing the legs on the last segment – ​​the ninth. From their ends we draw one at a time small segment for drawing the foot. A slight deviation from the boundaries is allowed.


5. We detail the upper part of the soldier’s torso - draw the collar, shoulder straps, shoulders and sleeves.


6. Instead of ovals, draw hands. We detail the legs and begin to draw the silhouette. We finish drawing high army boots on the legs.


7. Draw details on the face - eyes, eyebrows, nose and mouth. We do all this with a sharply sharpened pencil.


8. Let's add small elements to the soldier's drawing.


9. Make a stroke with a black marker over the pencil lines.


10. Create a natural skin color on the soldier’s hands and face using a pink and brown pencil. We will also color our hair with a brown pencil.


11. We will paint the soldier’s boots black.


12. Let's make the military uniform orange. There will be a brown color in dark areas and on some trims of clothing.


13. This concludes the master class on step-by-step drawing!