The high ponytail and layered clothing make drawing Beatrix a test of proportion control, and this step-by-step guide covers exactly how to work through that in the context of other The Loud House character tutorials on the site. The focus keyphrase here is how to draw Beatrix, and the walkthrough keeps each stage manageable so the outfit details build up cleanly.
What the 29 Steps Actually Cover
This tutorial runs 29 steps and ends on clean line art with no color fill, so every step is about getting the shapes and linework right. The character stands in a relaxed three-quarter pose, which means the body is slightly turned and requires some attention to how the jacket and pants align to the frame. Most of the detail work lands in the hair and the layered clothing around the upper body.
Beatrix’s Key Design Features
- Long straight hair pulled into high ponytail
- Round face with smile and small eyelashes
- Jacket with visible buttons and scarf
- Long pants with rounded flat shoes
- Relaxed three-quarter standing pose
If you have already worked through some of the other characters from the show, the outfit-heavy designs will feel familiar. Smiling Leni Loud and Luna Loud both practice similar full-body proportions, while Belle offers another take on character clothing with a bit more complexity.
Reading the Step Colors in This Tutorial
Each step image uses a three-color system to show what is new and what carries over:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Beatrix: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Share Your Finished Beatrix Sketch
Once the drawing is done, drop a photo of it in the comments. Seeing how different people handle the ponytail curve and the jacket buttons is always worth a look. New tutorials are posted to Facebook and Telegram as soon as they go live, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes up every day, and Pinterest stays updated regularly too. For more characters from the show, baby Lincoln Loud is a fun contrast in style, and Carol Pingrey is a shorter 18-step build worth trying. If you want to support the project, the Patreon page has unique hand-drawn coloring pages available.