A front-facing performance stance with microphone raised is what this guide captures, and the result is Springlock Fredbear rendered in full animatronic detail, joining the rest of the Five Nights at Freddy’s character tutorials on the site. This step-by-step walkthrough on how to draw Springlock Fredbear breaks the figure down into manageable stages across 39 steps.
What Makes This 39-Step Tutorial Worth the Time
The tutorial runs through all 39 steps as a full-body front-facing build, ending on clean line art rather than a colored version. The mechanical joint segments in the arms and legs are where most of the detail work is concentrated, so the middle and later steps require more patience than the early structural ones. Symmetry plays a big role throughout since the figure is posed straight-on.
Springlock Fredbear’s Design at a Glance
- Animatronic bear with round ears
- Small top hat perched on head
- Bow tie and two chest buttons
- Microphone held in left hand
- Segmented limbs with clawed feet
If you enjoy drawing FNAF animatronics, the Balloon Boy with sign and balloon tutorial shares a similar prop-holding pose worth practicing, and the Puppet is another full-body guide that focuses heavily on limb structure. For something closer to Fredbear’s bear-type build, Rockstar Freddy is a solid comparison piece.
Understanding the Color Coding in the Steps
Each step image uses a three-color system to make progress easy to follow:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Springlock Fredbear: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished the Drawing? Share It Around
Once the line art is done, drop your finished Springlock Fredbear in the comments below. Every new tutorial gets posted to Facebook and Telegram as soon as it goes live, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes up every day, and Pinterest stays regularly updated too, so following any of those is a good way to catch new additions. If you want to keep drawing through the roster, Springtrap from FNAF 3 is a natural next step, and Foxy the Pirate offers a very different silhouette to work through. If this guide was useful, consider supporting the project on Patreon, where exclusive hand-drawn coloring pages are available to members.