How to Draw Stitch from Lilo & Stitch: An Easy Step-by-Step Guide

· EmbroideryHoop
How to Draw Stitch from Lilo & Stitch: An Easy Step-by-Step Guide
A beginner-friendly, step-by-step drawing lesson inspired by Art For Kids Hub’s video. You’ll start with Stitch’s nose, carve out his big eyes, round the face and chin, add highlights, creases, a wide smile, and those iconic ears—then finish with color. Clear images and tips keep you on track.

Educational commentary only. This page is an educational study note and commentary on the original creator’s work. All rights remain with the original creator; no re-upload or redistribution.

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Table of Contents
  1. Introduction to Drawing Stitch
  2. Step 1: The Foundation - Nose and Nostrils
  3. Step 2: Shaping Stitch's Head and Eyes
  4. Step 3: Detailing the Face and Mouth
  5. Step 4: Drawing Stitch's Iconic Ears
  6. Step 5: Bringing Stitch to Life with Color
  7. From the Comments
  8. Troubleshooting & Quick Checks

Introduction to Drawing Stitch

Stitch’s face reads clearly because of a few big ideas: that rounded nose and nostrils, the oversized eyes that frame the nose, a soft chin line, and those wide ears. We’ll trace that arc step by step, mirroring the video’s clear order so you never get lost.

From the start, draw lightly. Curved lines are easy to refine if you keep your pressure soft—then you can darken once the shapes lock in. If you’re new to drawing, this tutorial is beginner-friendly and uses simple curves and arches, no complicated construction.

Watch out: Don’t rush the first arcs. The sooner you pause, the easier everything stays aligned later. magnetic embroidery hoop

What You'll Learn

  • How to place a centered nose so the face stays balanced.
  • Where to start the eye shapes relative to the nose corners.
  • How to “close” the face at the chin without making it pointy.
  • Easy highlight and crease placement to add dimension.

- A simple approach to those iconic, floppy ears.

Gather Your Materials

  • Paper
  • A pencil, pen, or stylus
  • An eraser (optional but handy)
  • Coloring materials (your choice)

Quick check: If you’re using markers, sketch lightly in pencil first, then ink, then erase pencil gently before coloring. magnetic embroidery frames

Step 1: The Foundation - Nose and Nostrils

The instructor starts in the center of the page with a curved line for the top of Stitch’s nose, then completes it into an oval. This oval anchors every other feature.

Starting with the Nose

  • Draw a curved line that arches up and over—like a gentle bridge.
  • Complete that into an oval, keeping it centered.
  • If the oval reads too tall or too wide, lightly redraw until it feels balanced.

Adding Detail to Nostrils

  • On each lower corner, add a small curved line for nostrils.
  • Keep them symmetrical and subtle; they add character without overpowering the shape.

Watch out: If your nose looks stretched, narrow the sides; if it’s tiny, broaden the top arch a touch. magnetic hoops

Step 2: Shaping Stitch's Head and Eyes

With the nose placed, you can frame the head and establish the eye areas. The video builds a flowing outline—forehead, slight spiky details up top, then down into the side of the head.

Framing the Head Outline

  • Above the nose, draw a small curve to indicate the top center of the head.
  • Add the spiky tuft details using varied, soft jagged lines so they feel lively, not uniform.

- Bring the line down the side of the head, keeping the curve smooth.

Creating the Eye Areas

  • On the left, draw a large arch that rises and dips down below the nose level; this will be the outer eye area.
  • Mirror it on the right at the same height, forming two generous, balanced eye spaces.
  • Connect gently from the top outline into these shapes to unify the face.

Pro tip: Compare the peak height of both arches. If one looks higher, adjust before moving on. magnetic embroidery hoops

Step 3: Detailing the Face and Mouth

Completing the Face Contour

  • From the bottom of the left eye area, curve inward toward the center, flatten slightly along the bottom.

- Do the same from the right side to meet in the middle. You should see a rounded chin—soft, not pointy.

Adding Eye Highlights and Creases

  • From the inner corners near the nose, draw curved lines that sweep up and out to form the inner eye outlines. Continue below and curve back up to meet the sides.
  • Inside each eye area, add a large oval for the pupil.
  • At the top of each pupil, add a small circle highlight. This tiny detail brings life to the eyes.

- Above the nose, add two simple arch creases: a larger one, then a smaller one closer to center.

Quick check: Are the pupils the same size and at the same height? If not, adjust the larger one slightly or thicken the smaller one until they match visually. magnetic embroidery hoops for brother

Drawing the Expressive Mouth

  • Mark small curves for the mouth corners on the left and right.
  • Connect them with a wide arch for the bottom lip—this is the signature friendly grin.
  • From the center of that bottom line, draw a straight line up toward the nose.
  • From each corner, curve lines down toward the lower face.

- Inside the mouth, draw a small arch for the tongue.

Watch out: If the mouth looks cramped, widen the bottom curve so it stretches comfortably across the face. magnetic embroidery hoops for babylock

Step 4: Drawing Stitch's Iconic Ears

Constructing the Right Ear

  • Starting just below the right eye, sweep a long curve up and out toward the top of the page.
  • Loop that curve around and down, bringing it back into the side of the face to enclose the ear.
  • Inside the ear, draw a sideways “V” crease.
  • From that V, add a curved line that wraps and returns to the face.

- Add one more interior curve higher up to give the ear depth.

Mirroring for the Left Ear

  • Repeat the same sequence on the left: long outer curve up and out, return to the face, then the internal V crease, the returning line, and an additional interior curve.

- Compare both ears for symmetry—remember they’re large and floppy, so playful rather than rigid.

Pro tip: If one ear looks smaller, expand the outermost sweep rather than adding thickness at the base; the top gesture sells the ear’s scale. brother embroidery machine

Step 5: Bringing Stitch to Life with Color

Choosing Your Colors The video’s finish shows a classic palette: blue tones for Stitch, pink inside the ears, a dark blue or black nose, black eyes with white highlights. You can pause on the final frame as a color reference, or personalize the palette if you prefer a stylized look.

Adding the Finishing Touches

  • Color neatly to the edges of your lines.
  • Keep the small highlight circles white for sparkle.
  • If you used pencil, gently erase any stray construction lines once the ink is dry.

From the artist’s sign-off: You’re encouraged to pause and color at your own pace; the exact brands or shades aren’t specified—creativity welcomed.

Watch out: If your colors streak, layer lightly and let each pass dry before the next. brother magnetic hoop

From the Comments

The audience response is overwhelmingly positive and enthusiastic. Several people shared that “it worked,” had fun following along, or felt proud of their results. One viewer said the video felt fast; a helpful channel reply reminded them to use the pause button to move step-by-step.

Highlights from the thread (paraphrased in English):

  • Viewers reported success and enjoyment following the steps.
  • New likes and subscriptions rolled in from people excited to keep drawing.
  • For those who felt rushed, pausing made the pace comfortable.

Quick check: If something looks off, revisit the nearest timestamped step, pause, and redraw lightly before committing darker lines. mighty hoop

Troubleshooting & Quick Checks

Uneven eyes

  • Symmetry test: Place your pencil across both pupils—do their tops align? If not, nudge the higher pupil down slightly.

Pointy chin

  • Re-curve the bottom face line to be more of a shallow U than a V. Soften the center by rounding it.

Tiny mouth

  • Extend the bottom lip arch further left and right to restore that wide, friendly grin.

Ear imbalance

  • If one ear feels small, lengthen the outer arc rather than thickening near the face. This keeps the ear light and floppy.

Too fast?

  • Use the pause button after every new curve or arch. It’s short, beginner-oriented instruction—pausing keeps your shapes clean.

Pro tip: Keep a scrap sheet for quick curve practice. Two repetitions before drawing on your main page can prevent erasing later.

Watch out: Over-darkening too early makes changes hard. Shade lightly until the overall face reads right. dime magnetic hoop

Final Thought

Stitch’s charm comes from generous curves, big eyes with bright highlights, and those sweeping ears. Follow the video’s clear order, pause as needed, and keep your lines light until the forms click. Then ink, color, and smile back at your finished Stitch.