Getting Mt. Lady’s horns and hero costume proportions to sit right on a full-body figure is the main challenge in this tutorial, and the My Hero Academia series has no shortage of characters that demand this kind of structural care. This step-by-step guide on how to draw Mt. Lady walks through 17 steps and ends with a fully colored result.
What This 17-Step Walkthrough Covers
The tutorial runs through 17 steps, finishing with a colored version so you can see exactly how the purple and orange costume reads at the end. The full-body pose with a confident stance means proportions are doing a lot of work here, and the horns add an asymmetric element at the top that takes some adjustment to get balanced over the figure.
Mt. Lady’s Key Design Features
- Long blonde hair flowing to the side
- Dark eye mask across face, smiling expression
- Purple and orange hero costume with white shorts
- Large purple demon-like horns on head
- Purple gloves and boots, confident pose
If you enjoyed drawing MHA hero costumes, Ryuko Tatsuma’s hero look covers similar full-body costume work, and All Might is worth tackling next if you want to practice a larger, more muscular build. Ochaco in her new hero costume is another solid option if you want to stay focused on costume detail.
Understanding the Step Color System
Each step image uses a three-color code 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 Mt. Lady: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished Your Mt. Lady Sketch? Show It Off
Drop your finished drawing in the comments below. It’s always good to see how different people handle the horns and the costume coloring across a full-body figure. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they’re published, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes live every day, and Pinterest stays updated regularly too. For more MHA sketching, Denki Kaminari in his upgraded costume and Nejire Chan are both worth the time. If you want to support the project and get access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages, the Patreon page is the place to go.