Getting the freckled face and round glasses to read correctly at a small scale is the trickiest part of this tutorial on how to draw Tulip Olsen, the main character from the Infinity Train series. The clothing layering, with the hoodie, skirt, and leggings stacked together, adds another layer of detail that rewards a slow, careful buildup.
What the 16-Step Walkthrough Covers
This is a full-body, colored result spread across 16 steps, so the construction phase runs longer than it might look at first. The pose has Tulip holding her backpack straps with both hands, which introduces a small amount of asymmetry in the arms and shoulders that takes some care to get right. Most of the detail work lands in the face and the clothing layers near the middle of the guide.
Tulip Olsen’s Key Visual Features
- Long red hair pulled into high ponytail
- Round glasses on a freckled face
- Green zip-up hoodie with hood down
- Gray skirt layered over dark leggings
- Blue ugg boots and a worn backpack
If you want more characters from the same show, the guide for Jesse Cosay is a good next step, and the tutorial for Lake (Mirror Tulip) is worth trying right after since the two share a lot of the same proportions. For something a bit different from the same series, Alan Dracula is a fun contrast in shape and style.
How the Step Colors Work in This Tutorial
Each step image uses a three-color system to make it clear what is new and what is already done:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Tulip Olsen: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished Your Drawing? Show It Off
Once the 16 steps are done and the colors are in, drop your finished Tulip Olsen drawing in the comments section below. It is always good to see how different artists handle the freckles and the hoodie folds. 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 day, and Pinterest stays updated regularly if you prefer saving references there. If you want to keep exploring the Infinity Train roster, One-One is a compact but fun build, and Atticus is a solid follow-up with a very different silhouette. If you find these guides useful, supporting the project on Patreon helps keep them coming, and patrons get access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages as well.