I've got a little stash of go-to spots for easy historical sketches that I still use when I want a quick Civil War drawing. For step-by-step video guides, YouTube is gold: channels like 'Art for Kids Hub' break things into big, simple shapes which is perfect if you want something easy and cute, while 'Proko' and 'Mark Crilley' help with fundamentals like proportions and faces so your soldiers don’t look flat. For reference photos, the Library of Congress and the National Archives have tons of authentic Civil War photographs and engravings you can trace or use to study uniforms, poses, and weapons. The Smithsonian and the 'American Battlefield Trust' also have image collections and explanatory notes that help you understand what details matter and which you can simplify.
If you prefer guided classes, Skillshare and Udemy have short courses on figure drawing and historical illustration; search for ‘‘historical costume drawing’’ or ‘‘how to draw soldiers step by step’’. For hands-on practice, try printable coloring pages or easy templates from Pinterest and Etsy — they give you clean outlines to trace and practice over. On the tech side, Procreate and Adobe Fresco have brushes and layering that make tracing and building up simple shading painless. A couple of books I like for basics are 'Drawing for the Absolute Beginner' and 'Figure Drawing for All It's Worth' — they help you break people down into shapes before you add hats, coats, and muskets.
Start by sketching the silhouette, add uniform blocks (cap, coat, boots), then refine face and gear. Keep the flag simple — a clean rectangle with folds suggested by a few lines — and don’t overdo tiny buttons. I find that combining a historical photo with a kid-friendly tutorial gives the perfect balance between accuracy and simplicity, and it’s genuinely fun to see a
stiff photo turn into a lively sketch. I still get a kick out of turning a dense reference into something playful and quick.