A flowing cape, an oversized head, and a smaller companion figure tucked just below the chin make Anais Errr Watterson one of the more structurally layered characters in the Friday Night Funkin’ roster, and this guide on how to draw Anais Errr Watterson breaks her down into 17 manageable steps. The line art result keeps the focus entirely on shape and proportion, which means the chibi build and the double-character composition get full attention.
Chibi Proportions and a Companion Figure: What Makes This Sketch Work
The tutorial runs 17 steps and ends on clean line art with no color, so every step is about building confident outlines rather than shading or fill. Most of the structural work happens in the first half, where the oversized head and body ratio get established. The companion figure sitting below the chin adds an asymmetric element that takes some careful spacing to get right, and the cape behind the body introduces flowing curves that need light initial sketching before committing to final lines.
Anais Errr Watterson: Key Design Elements
- Large rounded head with long flowing hair
- Wide eyes with lashes and expressive brows
- Small beak-like mouth, slightly open
- Cape flowing behind the body
- Small companion figure near lower body area
If you want more practice with FNF characters at varying complexity levels, Silver from FNF Tails Gets Trolled is a solid follow-up, and the Soft Henchman sketch covers some similar cape and silhouette work. Murder!Sans is worth trying too if you want to work on bolder, heavier linework after this one.
Reading the Step Colors in This Tutorial
Each step in this walkthrough 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 Anais Errr Watterson: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished the Sketch? Share It and Keep Drawing
Once the lines are clean and the cape curves are where you want them, drop your finished drawing in the comments below. Seeing how different people handle the companion figure and the hair flow is always useful for anyone working through the same steps. All new tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they are posted, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes live every single day, and Pinterest stays updated regularly if you prefer saving references that way. For more FNF line art practice, Cleveland Brown from FNF x Pibby has some good compositional overlap, and Tails Doll is another one worth adding to the queue. If you want to support the site and get access to unique hand-drawn coloring pages in the process, the Patreon page is the place to do it.