Shading noses and cheeks is where many beginner portrait artists get stuck — too light and the face looks flat, too dark and it looks muddy. But with a few smart techniques, you can create natural depth in facial features with just a few shadows.
✏️ Want to learn feature-by-feature with a simple system?
Create natural depth in facial features with just a few shadows
🎯 Why Noses and Cheeks Are Tricky
They’re soft, round, and don’t have clear outlines. That makes them hard to “draw” with lines alone. The key? Light and shadow — not details.
Great shading = believable form.
✍️ How to Shade a Nose Step by Step
1. Start With the Basic Shapes
Think of the nose as:
- A ball (tip)
- Two smaller spheres (nostrils)
- A bridge (cylinder)
Sketch these lightly first to guide your shading.
2. Establish the Light Source
Always decide where your light is coming from. This tells you:
- Which nostril is darker
- Where to leave highlights
- How to fade shadows smoothly across the nose
🎯 Most beginners skip this — don’t!
3. Add Soft, Rounded Shadows
Use:
- Side shading (with your pencil at an angle)
- Light layers
- A kneaded eraser to pull out highlights
Shade the side of the nose that faces away from the light — and under the tip.
✍️ How to Shade Cheeks Naturally
1. Use Gentle Curves, Not Straight Lines
Cheeks round over the cheekbone — never outline them harshly.
Instead, use:
- Gradual tonal shifts
- Feathered pencil strokes
- Blending with a tissue or stump (never your finger)
2. Focus on Planes of the Face
Imagine the cheek in three areas:
- Flat frontal plane
- Side plane
- Curve under the cheekbone
Shade the side plane darker, and softly blend into the frontal area. That’s your depth.
🧠 Extra Tips for Lifelike Shading
- Zoom in on photo references and squint to see values clearly
- Use a soft pencil (3B–6B) but build up slowly
- Don’t touch your darks until the end — easier to control that way
- Let light edges create form (you don’t need outlines)
🔗 Want a Portrait Course That Teaches Shading Step by Step?
This course helps you create natural depth in facial features with just a few shadows, with beginner-friendly demos for each part of the face.
🧭 Final Thoughts
Shading noses and cheeks doesn’t have to be complicated. If you break down the structure and follow the light, you can bring your portraits to life — no outlines, no stress.
✏️ Start drawing realistic faces with clear shading techniques you can trust