Far-Fetched built its cast around grounded, street-level personalities, and Warren fits right into that lineup alongside the other characters covered in the Far-Fetched tutorials on this site. This step-by-step guide walks through how to draw Warren with the kind of relaxed, confident stance that defines the character.
What Makes Drawing Warren Worth Your Time
The guide runs 33 steps and ends on clean line art, so the entire focus goes toward solid linework and proportion control. Warren is a full-body standing pose with one hand behind the back, which means you get to practice subtle weight distribution without a complex action pose getting in the way. The layered clothing adds most of the detail work, and the spiky hair with its side sweep takes a few passes to get right.
Warren’s Design at a Glance
- Short spiky hair with a side sweep
- Stern expression, small chin beard
- Open collared shirt over inner shirt
- Slim pants and sneakers
- Relaxed stance, one hand behind back
If you want to keep going with the Far-Fetched cast after finishing Warren, Griff and Piper use similar construction methods, so the transition between them is fairly smooth. Quinn is also worth checking out once you have the basics of the show’s art style down.
Reading the Color Coding in These Steps
Each step image uses a three-color system to show exactly where you are in the process:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Warren: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished Your Warren Sketch? Show It Off
Once you have the drawing done, drop it in the comments below. Seeing how different artists interpret the same character is always worth it, and your version might be the push someone else needs to pick up their pencil. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they are published, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes live every single day, and Pinterest gets updated regularly too. For more cartoon practice, Rue from Far-Fetched is a solid next step, or take a break from the show entirely with something like Pickle Rick for a completely different challenge. If you want to support the project and get access to hand-drawn coloring pages, the Patreon page is the place to do it.