Start with a pointy shape, that’s classic for elves! There’s a curved base and a tapering tip. Draw lightly and keep erasing until it feels right. The most important part is to make them look magical!
I’ve always loved the aesthetic of elf ears, so I’ve experimented quite a bit. First, create a guiding line where you want the ears to sit. They tend to be taller and more elongated than human ears. Use curved shapes that come to a point at the top. Pay attention to the angle; they should slightly lean outward.
Add internal details like the ear canal and some folds, but keep it simple. Finally, outline your sketch and refine it with shading for realism. Watching video tutorials really helped me improve my technique!
Drawing elf ears is a fun challenge! Start by sketching a basic outline that resembles a triangle with smooth curves. Make the base wider and the tip pointy for that classic elvish look. Next, add details like folds and indentations to give them depth. Shade lightly where shadows naturally fall to make them pop.
Don't forget to reference fantasy art for inspiration! Once you get the hang of the shape, you can easily customize them to fit your character's personality. Remember, practice makes perfect!
For cute stylized elf ears, start with a smooth triangle shape, then round the edges a bit. You could add a subtle curve at the bottom to make them unique.
Don't forget to bring some magic into it—maybe add jewels or patterns. Coloring is fun too. Use soft greens or browns because nature is something elves connect with. Experiment with styles; it’s all about what feels right!
2025-03-15 14:09:54
38
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
The Deaf She-wolf: Kaya
LycanNS
8.8
43.7K
This book is authored by Ariel Eyre.
"She is deaf."
"What, she can't be deaf. I have never heard of a deaf wolf. It is impossible."
"I am serious. She had an accident when she was six. She didn't have her wolf then, and it couldn't heal, resulting in hearing loss."
She smiled. Her smile could have knocked me over. It was something I would want to see as often as I could. "Can you hear me?" She just shook her head.
How on earth would I communicate with her if she couldn't talk? If I marked her, I could mind-link. I could mark her here and now. It is my right, after all. But she may not like that.
I had to wonder if her being deaf, though, would be okay. If I marked her, she would be Luna to my pack. She would need to be strong. I had no idea if losing her hearing made her weak. As much as I wanted to claim her on the spot, I would need to know that she could hold her own. Or, at the very least, could be taught to fight.
---------
When I pressured my brother to take me down to the southern territory I just wanted to experience the way the rest of the world lived. Growing up in the north is brutal and we survive off the land. But I never expected to meet my mate and from a southern pack made it all the more difficult. His values differed from my own. The way his pack lived was the opposite of how I was raised. The brutality of my life would lead me to make decisions that put the Shadow Pack in jeopardy.
"I keep the world safe from his people, but now he's the one protecting me.The Sluagh has come for me and nothing stops them. The monsters of Fairy chitter and cackle and screech all around us while Tiernan holds me tightly, hiding us within his magic. Under the cover of some roots, his body laid over mine, we wait. His lips brush my cheek. Our rapid breaths merge. My palms press against his chest, molding to his muscles and pulsing with his heartbeat. The terrifying sounds around us echo into silence but as I stare into his silver eyes I know the danger hasn't passed. This man—this fairy hunter—could tear apart my world.Fairy-Struck is created by Amy Sumida, an EGlobal Creative Publishing signed author."
While exploring the wilderness, my younger sister—Charlotte Forrester—and I accidentally stumble onto the territory of supernatural beings.
She grabs the hand of the noble, elegant male elf, her posture coy and intimate.
Before I can react, a wolfman with a scar on his face wraps his arm around my waist and leads me away.
Charlotte, who judges others by appearance, is unaware that the male elf—Elwin Duskwood—belongs to a tribe of half-elves. Half-elves are beautiful but possess no real capabilities. They are considered a marginalized group among elves and struggle to make ends meet every day.
On the other hand, the wolfman—Morgan Nightshade—is a mid-tier wolf tribe's Highlord. After giving birth to an extremely rare silver wolf for him, I have become the Highlady of the tribe. I'm respected by everyone in the tribe and feast on delicacies every day.
Meanwhile, Charlotte becomes emaciated after suffering from starvation for several months. When she sees how plump I am, she goes insane from jealousy. While the wolf tribe is entertaining guests at a banquet, she uses poison to kill me.
The next time I open my eyes, Charlotte and I are back at the moment we first entered the supernatural beings' territory by mistake.
Charlotte immediately hugs Morgan by the waist and kisses him. She showers him with flattery about his strength, calling him the man of her dreams.
I can't help but laugh out loud.
Silly Charlotte. As a wolfman, Morgan is ill-tempered, and he easily loses control of his emotions. He also becomes even more bloodthirsty after transforming. It's not all sunshine and rainbows being his mate.
But I never imagined the elves could be so… in that regard.
Saelyna and her twin brother, Cyran, are among the last, few elves in Halden that are still healing from the wounds of the rebellion. They both work in the King's Glade, growing the magical kingpeas for His Grace's use.
One day, Saelyna steals some of the peas in a bid to sell them and repay her brother for the loss of his sheep. That same evening, a werewolf attacks Cyran while hunting, injuring him severely. He escapes and makes it home, but is dying from the wound. A mysterious stranger stops by to help, and uses the peas to heal him.
The king's mages, however, have detected the use of magic and send their scouts to apprehend the culprit. Saelyna and Cyran prepare to flee, but are kidnapped, along with other elves.
They are taken to a land called Eldad, and their captors turned out to be the werewolves, who wants them to work on their lands and grow more kingpeas to aid their second attempt at a rebellion. Saelyna is placed under the claws of Caivan, who turns out to be the mysterious stranger who saved Cyran's life. And Cyran is forced to work for Gylen, the werewolf who had attacked him.
Saelyna finds out that he's not the helping kind though. Caivan is the pack's beta, and next in line to be the alpha, which requires him to be brutal, sharp at will and self-centered.
Over time, though, Saelyna and Caivan grow closer, bonding over their affinity for magic, their plans to escape the world and their love for books.
A banished princess had been staying in the mortal lands after her father, the King, dismissed her from the Immortal world because she fell in love with a mortal man. After the death of her husband, she frequently changes her home. After a few years, her cousin who accompanied her to the mortal lands told her that her mother was dying, which was shocking, since the elves were immortal and couldn't die. Princess Aelanor decided to go back to her home and meet her mother, but the journey made her realise that there was some dark plague going around which harms even the immortal races. She decided to go on an adventure to find the source of the evil, finding friendship and love along the way in the unlikeliest ways possible.
"What happens when you meet a tall and handsome elf king who has saved your life but kill your temper?"
~*~*~*~
"I'm more of a man in this house. Why can't you let me be on top?" Sean asked with a pout.
Oswin groaned, rolling his eyes and wondering just how much more innocent Sean could be. "It takes a heavy responsibility to be the top," he replied.
"Responsibility? Then it's perfect. I'm making more money, cooking,..."
"Sean. I'm talking about things like stretching and penetrating," Oswin explained as he ignored the bulge in his pants. "Do you even have experience?”
“Then teach me, your majesty.”
“With pleasure.”
~*~*~*~
It all starts when the elf king, Oswin Alvingham, mysteriously gets stuck in the human realm and loses his powers. As he roams the unfamiliar一dirty and low class if he is to describe Earth, he stumbles into Sean Cooper, a fresh graduate, and a full-time table-waiter, who gets bullied in the alley. Though Oswin's magical power is lost, his physical strength remains invincible. When he rescues Sean, the latter decides to take him in as gratitude. And that is where the mess begins. How can the king of the elf cope with his new life? How can Sean convince himself not to be evil enough to kick his savor out of his house? Most importantly, how do an average mortal and the noble upper-class immortal live together under the same roof and on the same bed?
~*~*~*~*
P.S:
1) This book contains mature and explicit 18+ scenes.
2) It also contains little graphic violence in some chapters, but I'll put a warning on the top of those chapters.
3) The ELF here is inspired by Lord of The Ring Series. Therefore, they are tall, slender and beautiful. Not tiny little beings like in children fairy tales.]
Bright idea: start with simple shapes — it's how I break down every elf sketch and it makes the whole process feel friendly instead of intimidating.
I usually begin with a light circle for the skull and a soft oval for the jaw; elves often have a slightly longer, narrower face, so stretch that oval a touch. Add a vertical centerline and a horizontal eye line about halfway down the head for a stylized look, or a little lower for realism. From there I put in a simple 'line of action' to show the pose, then block the torso with a rectangle and hips with a smaller one. For beginners, this blocky stage is magic: you can tweak proportions without turning your sketch into an eraser graveyard.
Next I focus on signature features: pointy ears (attach them slightly above the eye line and tilt them outward), almond-shaped eyes, and a graceful neck. Hair is basically a big shape—don't draw each strand; sketch the overall flow and then suggest detail. Keep clothing simple: a cloak, a tunic, or a leaf motif are easy and evocative. Once the construction looks good, go over it with cleaner lines, add a few folds and shadows, and finish with light shading or colored pencils. For practice, I do ten 5-minute elf heads concentrating only on ears, then ten gesture poses to loosen up. I get most of my inspiration from old fantasy art like 'The Hobbit' illustrations, but I love mixing styles—cute chibi elves or elegant, mature ones depending on mood. Drawing elves this way feels approachable and fun; I always end up smiling at the little quirks that appear.
If you're hunting for free, easy elf drawing templates online, I keep a little toolbox of go-to places that always kickstart my sketches. I usually start with Pinterest because its pins are full of simple step-by-step diagrams and printable coloring pages—search for terms like "easy elf drawing template," "elf coloring page," or "kawaii elf step by step." You can save a bunch of images to a board and compare poses, face shapes, and ear styles until something clicks.
Beyond Pinterest, I love sites that cater to beginners: EasyDrawingGuides, DragoArt, and How2DrawStuff offer clean, progressive tutorials that break characters into basic shapes. For printable line art, SuperColoring and Crayola have simple elf sheets meant for kids that are perfect for tracing and practice. If you want vector templates or scalable assets, Freepik and Vecteezy host free vectors (watch the licensing—some require attribution). DeviantArt also has lots of user-made templates and base layers you can download and adapt.
If you learn better with video, 'Draw So Cute' and 'Art for Kids Hub' have approachable elf tutorials on YouTube. A quick tip: search "step by step elf drawing" or "simple elf tutorial" and add "printable" if you want sheets. For extra flexibility I often open a template in a simple editor (like Krita or Inkscape) to tweak proportions, or print it lightly and trace with a lightbox or window to make my own variations. I get a goofy little thrill when a simple template turns into a unique character—there's something charming about turning those basic lines into personality.