A slight forward lean with hands resting on a surface gives this depiction of Nunnally vi Britannia a composed, almost contemplative weight, and this guide covers exactly how to draw Nunnally vi Britannia in that pose, as part of the broader Code Geass tutorial collection on the site. The art style here skews older and more mature than the standard canon look, which makes the linework and proportions feel different from what most fans expect.
A Mature Style and What the 13 Steps Cover
The tutorial runs through 13 steps and ends on a fully colored result, so the final stage includes color fills on top of completed line art. The character is drawn in a more realistic anime style rather than chibi or the sharp angular look of the original series, which means facial proportions and the drape of the clothing take more careful attention than usual. The forward lean adds a slight foreshortening to the upper body, and that is where most of the structural work happens in the early steps.
Nunnally’s Design at a Glance
- Long wavy brown hair, center-parted
- Large violet eyes, serious expression
- White dress with wide bell sleeves
- Pink bow tied at the chest
- Small green bow at the neckline
If you enjoy drawing anime characters with detailed clothing and expressive faces, a few other tutorials on the site are worth checking out: Yuuki Asuna has similar dress detail and hair complexity, and Leafa is another good pick if long hair and flowing clothing are what you want to practice. For a contrast in style, Kirito keeps things simpler on the clothing front.
Reading the Step Colors
Each step image uses a three-color system to make the progression clear:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Nunnally vi Britannia: Step-by-Step Tutorial












Finished the Drawing? Show It Off
Drop your finished Nunnally in the comments below. It is genuinely good to see how different people handle the dress folds and that forward lean, so sharing is always encouraged. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they are published, a new YouTube video goes live every single day based on existing guides, and Pinterest gets updated regularly too. If you want to go further with similar character work, Kirito’s portrait is a solid next step for practicing facial detail, and the Asuna step-by-step covers similar clothing and hair challenges. If you want to support the project and get access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages, the Patreon page is the place to go.