A steady walking stance with hands spread wide is what this guide captures for Edgeshot, one of the pro heroes covered in the My Hero Academia tutorial collection. This step-by-step walkthrough shows how to draw Edgeshot from his layered ninja outfit down to the scarf trailing behind him.
What Makes Drawing Edgeshot Worth the Practice
The tutorial runs 18 steps and ends on a fully colored result, so the line art and color work are both addressed. Most of the complexity sits in the layered outfit and the flowing scarf, which requires careful attention to how fabric folds stack on top of each other. The headpiece adds height and sharpness to the silhouette, so getting that proportion right early sets up the rest of the figure cleanly.
Edgeshot’s Key Visual Features
- Large pointed horn-like headpiece on top
- Blue and red layered ninja-style outfit
- Red scarf flowing out behind him
- Mask with red accents covering lower face
- Green claw accessory visible on left shoulder
If you enjoy drawing pro heroes from this series, Midnight and Muscular are solid follow-ups with their own distinct costume details to work through. The villain side of the roster is well covered too, including Stain, whose sharp angles make for good line control practice.
Understanding the Color Coding in the Steps
Each step uses a three-color system to show exactly what is new and what came before:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Edgeshot: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished Your Edgeshot Sketch? Share It Below
Drop your finished drawing in the comments. Seeing how others approach the scarf and the layered outfit details is always useful, and it helps other people following the same walkthrough. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they are published, a new YouTube video goes live every single day pulling from the existing guides, and Pinterest stays updated regularly. If you want more characters to sketch from the same series, All for One has a lot of detail work to dig into, and Himiko Toga in action pose is a good challenge for dynamic figure practice. Supporting the project on Patreon gives you access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages and helps keep new guides coming.
very nice post, i certainly love this website, keep on the good work
Happy to hear that! More exciting updates ahead