Last Updated on April 20, 2026
Getting a high kick pose to look balanced and grounded is the main challenge in this tutorial, and that difficulty is exactly what makes learning how to draw Kim Possible worth the effort. She appears here in a martial arts kick with the full body in motion, pulled from the roster of various cartoon characters covered on the site.
What the 14-Step Walkthrough Actually Covers
The tutorial runs through 14 steps and ends on clean black and white line art with no color fill, so all the focus goes into line placement and proportions. The action pose means one leg is raised and the body weight shifts, which gives you real practice with figure balance and asymmetry. The sketch phase builds the underlying structure, and the later steps tighten the clothing detail and facial expression before the final clean lines come in.
Kim Possible’s Design at a Glance
- Long hair tied back in a ponytail
- Furrowed brows, determined expression
- Crop top, utility belt, loose pants
- Wristband gloves on both hands
- High kick pose, one leg raised
If you enjoy sketching cartoon characters in action, the Chuckie from Rugrats step by step and the guide for Droop-a-Long with a pistol are both worth a look, and happy Stitch is a good contrast if you want something with a simpler silhouette to practice first.
Reading the Step Colors
Each step in the drawing sequence uses a three-color system to show exactly what is new and what came before:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Kim Possible: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished Your Sketch? Share It and Keep Drawing
Drop your finished drawing in the comments below. Seeing how different people handle the kick pose and the body balance is always useful for other artists working through the same steps. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they are published, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes up every day, and Pinterest stays regularly updated as well. If you want more characters to work on, the draw for chibi Pooh Bear is a fun shift in proportions after a full-body action figure, and Dennis the Menace is another classic cartoon character worth adding to your sketchbook. If you want to support the project and get access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages, the Patreon page is the place to go.