Capturing Madara’s sharp bone structure and heavy-lidded eyes without flattening the intensity of his face is the main challenge in this guide, and the Naruto character demands careful attention to get right. This tutorial walks through how to draw the face of Madara Uchiha step by step, covering his war-era look with the red armor and forehead protector.
What This Face Portrait Covers
The walkthrough runs 9 steps and ends on a fully colored result, so the final stage includes shading and color choices for the red armor and dark hair. The focus throughout is a portrait-style composition, which means proportions and facial structure carry more weight here than they would in a full-body sketch. The hair volume and the asymmetry from the Sharingan eye are where most of the careful work is concentrated.
Madara’s Key Visual Features
- Long wild spiky black hair, flowing down
- Red Sharingan eye on one side
- White forehead protector with swirl symbol
- Red armored outfit with black underlayer
- Calm, serious facial expression
If you want more face-portrait practice within the same series, Might Guy’s face and Iruka Umino’s face follow a similar structure. For something with more body detail, the Deidara tutorial shifts into full-figure territory.
Reading the Step Colors
Each step image uses a three-color system to show exactly what changes at each stage:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw the Face of Madara Uchiha: Step-by-Step Tutorial








Share Your Madara Drawing When You’re Done
Once you finish, drop your result in the comments below. It’s always useful to see how different people handle the hair volume and the Sharingan eye. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they’re published, a new YouTube video based on existing guides posts every single day, and Pinterest stays updated regularly if that’s where you browse. For more Naruto face practice, Sasori’s face and the full Kakashi Hatake drawing are solid next steps. If you’d like to support the site and get access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages in the process, the Patreon page is worth a look.