Whenever I sit down with a blank sheet and a pencil, proportion is the quiet system that turns guesswork into something that actually looks like a person. I break a head down into simple landmarks: a
Sphere and jawline, the brow line, the eye line (usually halfway down the skull), the nose line about halfway between the eyes and chin, and the mouth sitting roughly a third of the way between the nose and chin. Using those checkpoints keeps me honest — I can measure with my pencil, compare widths and angles, and catch when an ear sits too high or eyes are off by a hair. It’s almost like having invisible scaffolding that supports everything I add afterwards.
Beyond the basic measurements, I obsess over relationships: how wide the eyes are relative to the nose, how far the corners of the mouth align with the pupils, how the ears match the brow and nose levels. Those comparative checks help with convincing perspective — tilt the head and those distances compress or stretch predictably. I learned a ton from studying 'Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain' and watching warmup exercises from online tutors; the more I practice, the more I notice subtle asymmetries that define a likeness.
But proportions aren’t rules that straitjacket creativity. Once the structure is secure, I push and stylize — exaggerate cheeks for cuteness, elongate
Jaws for drama, tweak eye spacing to age a face. Proportions give me a reliable baseline so my departures read intentionally rather than accidentally. When a portrait finally clicks, that balance of structure and personality makes me grin every single time.