Heavy-lidded eyes, a stubborn frown, and a perfectly rectangular brick body make Richard one of the more grumpy presences in the Unikitty cast, and this guide walks through how to draw Richard in just 8 steps of clean line art. He is an anthropomorphized LEGO brick with a personality to match the shape: blunt, square, and thoroughly unamused.
A Brick With Feelings: What Makes Richard Worth Drawing
This tutorial covers 8 steps and produces a black and white line art result with no color fill, so the focus stays entirely on shape accuracy and clean linework. The LEGO brick form is mostly geometric, but the grumpy facial expression and subtle structural details like the studs on top and the side panel edge are where the precision work actually lives.
Richard’s Design at a Glance
- Rectangular LEGO brick body shape
- Heavy-lidded eyes with thick brows
- Small downturned mouth expression
- Three studs visible on the top surface
- Side panel detail on the left edge
If you are working through the Unikitty roster, the tutorials for Master Frown and Unikitty herself pair well with this one since all three characters share the same flat, cartoon-forward style. Dr. Fox is another solid follow-up if you want to keep working with the show’s cast.
Reading the Step Colors in This Tutorial
Each step uses a simple three-color system to show what to draw and when:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Richard: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished the Sketch? Share That Grumpy Brick
Once you have your Richard drawing done, drop it in the comments below. Seeing how different people handle the boxy proportions and that deadpan expression is always worth a look. 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 regularly updated as well. If you want to keep going with the show’s characters, Brock and Hawkodile are both worth tackling next. Supporting the project on Patreon also gets you access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages that are not available anywhere else.